@jgs1996sports: #leggings #widelegleggingsoutfit #tiktokshopmemorialday #tiktokdealsforyoudays #summerwins

JGS1996 Mall
JGS1996 Mall
Open In TikTok:
Region: US
Friday 29 May 2026 01:44:53 GMT
137
0
0
0

Music

Download

Comments

There are no more comments for this video.
To see more videos from user @jgs1996sports, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Try this right now. Pinch the skin on your temple and roll it between your fingers. Does it move freely? Or does it feel stuck to the tissue underneath? Your skin should roll, lift, and glide over the layers below it. When it does not, the superficial fascia connecting your skin to the deeper tissue has become adhered. The layers are glued together. And that changes everything about how your face looks and ages. When the skin cannot move independently from the muscle and fascia below, it gets pulled into every tension pattern underneath. Lines deepen. The tissue looks flat and compressed. Circulation is restricted because the capillary beds between the layers are compressed too. This applies everywhere. Your temples, your forehead, your jawline, your neck. Anywhere the skin feels pinned down instead of mobile, you have a fascial adhesion restricting the tissue. Now here is what most people do not understand. Massage does not stretch your skin out. It does the opposite. Research on mechanotransduction shows that when fibroblasts in the skin and fascia receive mechanical stimulation, they respond by remodeling the extracellular matrix and increasing collagen synthesis. A study in PMC showed that both massage and mechanical stimulation increased skin shear modulus by approximately 20 percent, meaning the tissue became firmer, not looser. Mechanical loading activates fibroblast activity, stimulates collagen production, and can even trigger a more youthful collagen structure in the fascia. You are not loosening your skin. You are restoring the glide between the layers while making the skin itself stronger. Roll your skin. If it does not move, that is where you need to work. Where did you find the most restriction?
Try this right now. Pinch the skin on your temple and roll it between your fingers. Does it move freely? Or does it feel stuck to the tissue underneath? Your skin should roll, lift, and glide over the layers below it. When it does not, the superficial fascia connecting your skin to the deeper tissue has become adhered. The layers are glued together. And that changes everything about how your face looks and ages. When the skin cannot move independently from the muscle and fascia below, it gets pulled into every tension pattern underneath. Lines deepen. The tissue looks flat and compressed. Circulation is restricted because the capillary beds between the layers are compressed too. This applies everywhere. Your temples, your forehead, your jawline, your neck. Anywhere the skin feels pinned down instead of mobile, you have a fascial adhesion restricting the tissue. Now here is what most people do not understand. Massage does not stretch your skin out. It does the opposite. Research on mechanotransduction shows that when fibroblasts in the skin and fascia receive mechanical stimulation, they respond by remodeling the extracellular matrix and increasing collagen synthesis. A study in PMC showed that both massage and mechanical stimulation increased skin shear modulus by approximately 20 percent, meaning the tissue became firmer, not looser. Mechanical loading activates fibroblast activity, stimulates collagen production, and can even trigger a more youthful collagen structure in the fascia. You are not loosening your skin. You are restoring the glide between the layers while making the skin itself stronger. Roll your skin. If it does not move, that is where you need to work. Where did you find the most restriction?

About