COVID masks stopped people from smiling — they’re taking lessons to relearn

Now you can put a price on a smile.

People in Japan who have become accustomed to wearing a face mask have turned to the help of a professional — to learn to smile again.

After the Japanese government lifted its recommendation to wear masks for COVID prevention in March, many residents seemingly realized they had forgotten how to execute the facial expression.

“People have not been raising their cheeks under a mask or trying to smile much,” said Keiko Kawano, who teaches smiling through her company Egaoiku — which translates to “Smile Education” — told the New York Times last month. “Now, they’re at a loss.”

Lessons to perfect a perfect grin come at a cost: around $55 for a one-on-one session to teach people how to fire up the old cheek muscles and deliver a dazzling Hollywood smile.

“I hadn’t used my facial muscles much during COVID,” Himawari Yoshida, a 20-year-old student of Kawano’s, explained to Reuters, adding that she’s taking the course at the recommendation of her school to prepare for the job market.


Coach Keiko Kawano teaches students at a recent smile training course at Sokei Art School in Tokyo, Japan.
Coach Keiko Kawano teaches students at a recent smile training course at Sokei Art School in Tokyo, Japan.
REUTERS

Staff members of the Tokyo metropolitan government wear face masks in Tokyo in April 2020.
Staff members of the Tokyo metropolitan government wear face masks in Tokyo in April 2020.
Getty Images

Keiko Kawano instructs interested students in relearning how to properly display pearly whites.
Keiko Kawano instructs interested students in relearning how to properly display pearly whites.
REUTERS

Kawano teaches the “Hollywood Style Smiling Technique,” which teaches how to achieve “crescent eyes” and “round cheeks,” plus learning to shape the edges of the mouth to show eight upper teeth.

She said there has been a “four-fold increase” in demand for lessons post-COVID.

One of the exercises instructs students to hold up mirrors to their faces and stretch the sides of their mouths with their fingers to get used to the feeling.

“Culturally, a smile signifies that I’m not holding a gun and I’m not a threat to you,” she explained to Reuters, adding that an influx of international tourists could mean learning how to communicate again using facial expressions.


Keiko Kawano demonstrates how to use facial muscles.
Keiko Kawano demonstrates how to use facial muscles.
REUTERS

In May, public broadcaster NHK conducted a poll that said 55% of Japanese people are still wearing masks as often as they were when the government guidance was in place, with just 8% not wearing a mask anymore.

“I think there’s a growing need for people to smile,” Kawano maintained.

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