There’s this pervasive notion in the beauty industry that touching your face is an absolute evil, as it’s a recipe for clogged pores and bacteria. It’s a valid concern, sure, but completely flipping the script and ignoring your skin is not the answer. So I’m going to give some advice that might be a bit jarring to the average beauty fan: Touch your face! Feel your skin! You may encounter some noteworthy skin care benefits, especially if you do it strategically, like with a relaxing face-tapping technique. Below, experts share the perks of getting to know your complexion. “What it does better than any [technique] I’ve seen is it quickly takes down your physical and emotional dysregulation,” licensed clinical social worker and master EFT trainer Robin Bilazarian, LCSW, DCEP, tells mbg. “It kicks us from the sympathetic nervous system of fight or flight into the parasympathetic nervous system of rest and digest, and it does that so quickly.” That said, research shows tapping can be effective at decreasing anxiousness and psychological distress1; of course, managing stress is a solid move for skin health regardless, but the practice may have even more skin care benefits. “[It] increases blood circulation and improves lymph flow to help us keep up levels of skin cell function and lymphatic drainage,” says board-certified dermatologist Ava Shamban, M.D., founder of SKINFIVE. “A sluggish system leads to sallow skin. Circulation and oxygenation are always supportive for delivering nutrients, plasma, hydration, and essential minerals through the network skin and to keep our sebaceous networks flowing.” It’s even more important to maintain that blood flow when you’re feeling anxious. “When we are agitated or stressed out, everything about us is robbing blood to go to major muscles,” Bilazarian notes. Think about how the color may drain from your face when you’re met with a bout of anxiety. Your brain and body are trying to protect you from the threat at hand, so functions like digestion and circulation are put on the back burner (that’s also why people may face an upset stomach when stressed). With face tapping, you’re helping bring that blood flow back to baseline, thus signaling to your body that it’s OK to relax. And at the risk of sounding like a broken record, stress management is skin care. According to Shamban, reducing stress is one of the best “anti-aging” treatments out there. “With these established sequences at specific acupressure points along with verbalization of thoughts, we are able to create a connection within ourselves, [and] harness our emotions or feelings to release them,” she notes. “Thus, it may promote healing around some emotional or physical issues that have continued to hold us back.” Bilazarian even says one of her previous colleagues—board-certified psychiatrist and doctor of Chinese medicine Jingduan Yang, M.D.—uses the same points for his cosmetic acupressure practice. “He would watch me [train], and he would say the points that I was using were the exact points he would teach people to use for his acupressure face-lift,” she recounts. The link between mental health and skin health has never seemed so clear. Zooming out even further, tapping gives you the opportunity to really connect with your skin and address any emotions that may arise during the practice. When you put your hands on your face and really feel the texture of your pores, it’s way more difficult to criticize any “imperfections” you might have. Shamban echoes the sentiment: “Instead of looking into a mirror and judging or criticizing, feeling and tapping may enable us to have a more tactile perspective and greater appreciation of our face, features, and skin,” she says. “Tapping may change our perception, create a greater connection, and lead to a more beautiful view of ourselves.” And when you treat your skin with the love and care it deserves, you’ll often yield a way brighter glow. No matter which points you choose, you’ll want to tap light to medium pressure (like you’re drumming your fingertips on a desk) and visualize the problem or situation that’s making you anxious. Move through each of the meridians and remember to breathe along the way. “Not an exaggerated breath, definitely not a yoga breath… It’s more of a pacing,” she explains. “It’s more to slow you down a little bit.” You can also end your practice with a heart hold, which she says can be super calming.

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