Facial Muscle Training
A Comprehensive Looksmaxxing Guide — Mechanisms, Methodology & Long-Term Structural Adaptation
A Comprehensive Looksmaxxing Guide — Mechanisms, Methodology & Long-Term Structural Adaptation
Thread Song
Your face has 40+ muscles that atrophy just like body muscles. Training them = sharper jaw, lifted cheeks, tighter under-eyes, and better definition. Best results at 15–35. Takes 3–12 months. Stack with low bodyfat + mewing for max effect. Main tools: mastic gum, resistance exercises, consistency. No equipment needed.
AGE EFFICIENCY — When Should You Start?
Age Range | Efficiency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
13–17 | Hormones + growth plates still active. Bone still moldable. Best time to start mewing AND muscle training. Gains come fast. | |
18–25 | Still high plasticity. Muscle hypertrophy at peak response. Most documented results come from this age group. | |
26–35 | Slower but solid results. Collagen still decent. Definition gains are very real. | |
36–45 | Results take longer. Collagen declining. Muscle tone still improves significantly and fights sagging. | |
46+ | Less hypertrophy response. Main benefit shifts to anti-aging — preventing muscle atrophy and facial sagging. |
The real pill: starting earlier = exponentially better results. But at ANY age, a trained face beats an untrained face. Period.
BEFORE & AFTER — What To Expect Visually
- Jaw feels sore after gum sessions (good sign — it's working)
- Slight temporary puffiness from inflammation
- No visible change yet — you're building the foundation
- Before look: soft undefined jaw, flat cheeks, no muscle separation
- Masseter visibly starting to thicken at the jaw angle
- Cheekbone area looks slightly more lifted
- Under-eye area tighter with consistent eye exercises
- People notice you look "different" but can't pinpoint why
- Jaw angle VISIBLY wider and more defined
- Cheek hollows more prominent (especially under 15% bf)
- Temple area filled out — skull looks broader
- Neck-jaw separation cleaner and sharper
- Full hypertrophy achieved
- Gains are now permanent muscle mass
- Combined with low bodyfat = completely transformed facial structure appearance
Bone adapts its structure in response to the mechanical loads placed on it. More stress = more bone density and repositioning in that direction. Your face is no exception.
How Muscles Trigger Bone Remodeling
- Mechanical Load — Masseter contraction pulls on the mandible and zygomatic arch through attachment points, generating tensile stress on bone surfaces
- Osteocyte Activation — Embedded bone sensor cells detect the strain and release signaling molecules (sclerostin decreases, IGF-1 and prostaglandins increase)
- Osteoblast Response — Signals recruit bone-building cells that migrate to the stressed area and deposit new bone matrix, which mineralizes over weeks to months
- Bone Remodeling — Simultaneously, osteoclasts remove bone in areas of low stress — bone is literally reshaped toward the direction of habitual mechanical load
Muscle Efficiency by Region
| Muscle | Bone Attachment | Remodeling Effect | Efficiency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masseter | Mandible angle + ramus | Widens jaw angle, increases gonial width, adds ramus height | |
| Temporalis | Coronoid process + temporal bone | Thickens temporal bone, widens skull at temples | |
| Pterygoids | Mandible inner surface | Forward + lateral jaw projection over long term | |
| Buccinator | Maxilla + mandible raphe | Lateral maxillary pressure — relevant to palate width | |
| Zygomaticus | Zygomatic bone | Mostly soft tissue lift, minimal direct bone stress | |
| Platysma | Mandible lower border | Mild mandible tension, mainly aesthetic soft tissue effect | |
| Orbicularis Oculi | Orbital rim (indirect) | Minimal — mainly soft tissue tightening |
Bottom line: The masseter is the most powerful muscle in the human body relative to its size, generating up to 200 lbs of force. It directly loads the jawbone every single session. That's not soft tissue fluff — that's structural adaptation.
THE MUSCLES & HOW TO TRAIN THEM
1. Masseter — The King of Facial Aesthetics

- Mastic/Falim Gum: 2–3 pieces, 2 sessions × 25 mins daily. Chew slow, both sides equally.
- Jaw Resistance: Fist under chin, open mouth against resistance. Hold 5–10 secs. 3×15 reps.
2. Temporalis — The Temple Muscle

- Chew on back teeth specifically. Bite down hard and hold 2–3 secs. Feel activation with fingers on temples.
- 3×15 daily
3. Zygomaticus — Cheekbone Area

- Cheek Lifter: Wide smile, no teeth, hold 10 secs. 20 reps.
- Resistance Smile: Index fingers at mouth corners, smile against resistance. 5 secs × 15 reps.
4. Orbicularis Oculi — Around the Eyes

- Squeeze eyes shut with full effort. Hold 5 secs. 3×20.
- Hard winks — 30 each side daily.
5. Buccinator — Cheek Hollow Muscle ( I wouldn't recommend training it usually )

- Suck cheeks in as hard as possible. Hold 10 secs. 3×15.
6. Platysma — Jaw-Neck Separation

- Pull corners of mouth down and out (grimace). Hold 10 secs × 15 reps. 2× daily.
| Muscle | Exercise | Volume |
|---|---|---|
| Masseter | Mastic gum chewing | 2 × 25 min sessions |
| Masseter | Fist resistance jaw open | 3×15 |
| Temporalis | Back teeth clench hold | 3×15 |
| Zygomaticus | Resistance smile | 3×15 |
| Orbicularis Oculi | Hard eye squeeze | 3×20 |
| Buccinator | Cheek suck hold | 3×15 |
| Platysma | Grimace hold | 3×15 |
Total active time (without gum): ~20 minutes. Zero excuse.
- One-sided chewing — causes asymmetry. Always train both sides equally.
- Overtraining with gum (4+ hrs/day) — TMJ risk. Keep it reasonable.
- Expecting results in 2 weeks — minimum 6 months for visible structural change.
- High bodyfat — hides everything. Get to 10–13% bf first.
THE FULL NATTY LOOKSMAX STACK
- Low bodyfat (10–13%)
- Mewing / correct tongue posture
- 8 hrs quality sleep (facial puffiness is real)
- High hydration
- High protein diet
- Consistent facial muscle training
Facial muscles breakdown
Wolff's Law & Bone Remodeling
Wolff's Law & Bone Remodeling
- https://link.springer.com/book/9783642106453
- https://meridian.allenpress.com/angle-orthodontist/article/64/3/175/55671
- https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev.bioeng.8.061505.095721
- https://asbmr.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbmr.320
- https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.3109/00016359509095915
- https://academic.oup.com/ejo/article/13/6/423/441878
- https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00220345990780010601
- https://www.nature.com/articles/nature01599
- https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.289.5484.1504
- https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01623429
- https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamadermatology/fullarticle/2666841
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S088894520501305X
Every force your face habitually generates reshapes the bones underneath it over time. That's not cope — that's biology.


