1. If you are used to sleeping sideways in one direction (left or right), the face of the oppressed party is bigger than the other.
2. If you are used to chewing food with one tooth (left or right), the face of the one that chews for a long time is bigger than the other.
As for the body, it is also related to sleeping habits.
Q:
If an adult is asymmetrical because of this, and he later corrects this habit, will there be any chance to restore symmetry in the future?
A: As long as it is not congenital, everyone has a chance. In addition to strengthening physical exercise, some living habits should also be adjusted appropriately.
For example, most tennis players are used to swinging with one arm. The arm that has been used for a long time is obviously much bigger. Only by strengthening the exercise of the other arm can we gradually maintain relative symmetry.
Q:
But tennis players are asymmetrical in muscles, and it is the skeleton that is asymmetrical in face and body.
A:
If it is bone asymmetry, it involves another problem-plastic surgery.
Modern medicine can also achieve good results through chemical and physical methods, such as cutting bone, filling, stretching, increasing or decreasing bone density and so on.
If it is an adult, because the bones are in the growing period, it is not very easy to use.