Tuesday, September 26, 2023
Anyone can scrape around the eyes with a tool but it takes special skill to really understand the body-wide context of facial features like eye bags and dark rings. In this episode, Clive looks at what these features mean both in the local context of your face and also how they stem from circulatory and muscular relationships within the body. Chinese medicine is all about patterns and motions and Facial Gua sha is no different. He shows you how eye bags are closely related to your stomach and digestion, and how dark rings are connected to the kidneys. He also explains how these are treated and the cautions of applying temperature to the face.
Hello and welcome to episode 2 of season 2 of the Gua sha show. And today we’re exploring under your eyes and how to approach this area with Facial Gua sha. And I’m going to show you, how a little of the right knowledge can transform how you understand and treat the face!
In the case of eye bags, it could be the case of fluid accumulating in the lower eye area giving it a swollen appearance. There can also be a weakening of the skin which allows it to sag and it’s also possible for the fat pad which supports your eyes to slip into this lose area.
With dark rings, you’re usually seeing the superficial capillaries below the skin and because the light wavelengths which show through the subcutaneous tissue are limited, you mainly see blue/purple colour. A temporary increase in blood volume can make these more visible. And the skin in this area is naturally thin and when it gets even thinner, these colours will be more pronounced.
So the most common facial features under your eyes that people often would like treatment on are eye bags and dark rings. And of course, they’re very common. They might range from having a few too many late nights to a permanent feature and this really depends on what’s happening in your body and what stage you are in life.
So what causes these conditions? Let me start by giving you the standard reasons.
You might get dermal fillers which is when they inject material into your cheeks and under your eyes to smooth it out. So in effect you build around eye bags to camouflage them. This lasts 6-12 months.
You might get laser resurfacing which removes the surface layers of skin in the under-eye area with a laser. Or a chemical peel which dissolves old skin cells with chemicals. Again, temporary.
The drastic option is a lower eyelid lift where the fat in the lower eye area is readjusted and the muscle and skin are tightened to create a smooth appearance.
Let’s now give you a more advanced idea of what’s happening and we can see what causes them in another way. This will then make it easy for us to know how to treat them.
So two things are important. The circulation system and your musculature.
Well you can always start with local treatment in the muscle above and beneath the eyes and in the cheek area.
It’s a very sensitive area and great care must be taken not to damage the skin beneath the eyes, nor to go too close to or accidentally touch the eyeball with a tool.
Strokes are outwards away from the mid-line and the best way to treat is to follow a simple plan. The easiest thing is to get hold of a copy of the first or revised version of my Facial Gua sha book and you’ll see my protocol for treating under the eyes. It’s called Facial Gua sha: A Step-by-step Guide to a Natural Facelift. The front cover has a close-up of my wife holding a tool. The revised edition came out this year but both editions contain this protocol.
A common suggestion you might come across is to apply a cold compress but watch out. Applying something cold presumes the presence of heat and inflammation. Suppose there isn’t inflammation. In fact, often there isn’t. What happens when something gets cold? It contracts. This is what cold does. So rather than vasodilating action of heat, cold is going to have the opposite reaction.
You remember being told that you had ice an injury, right? And you may be familiar with the abbreviation RICE (rest, ice, compression and elevation) but you may not be aware that even Dr Gabe Mirkin, a former assistant professor at the University of Maryland, the man that introduced it, no longer recommends it and even goes as far to say that there is data that shows it delays healing. So don’t go straight to the ice pack and make the area cold. Instead you could try warmth. A warm eye pack will increase the local temperature of the tissue and so aid in the circulation of blood.
It could be hot or cold but which one depends on the presence of heat. If there’s no heat why do you want to constrict the area with cold?
We know there’s a strong relationship to the stomach. So apart from local treatment on the face, treatment on digestion might be needed. This can mean treating tight areas of the stomach channel or on the mid to lower back in the Stomach area (the details of that is in the Holographic Gua sha book). Also the sternum, thighs and lower legs.
Also the kidney (on the leg), heart channel (on the arm). The liver channel (on the leg) and the bladder channel (it’s actually heavily implicated in any issue with the area of the orbicularis occuli mucle) - on the head, back and legs.
Director of Komorebi Institute
From researching underfunded healthcare in Uganda, to running a thriving chronic illness clinic in North Africa, to collaborating with hospitals in Sri Lanka to train staff and empower communities - My journey has been dedicated to democratizing access to beauty and health.