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Gurning [face-pulling] contests were once part of every fairground programme.
And here's where I have a confession to make.
No. Not that I regularly won these contests, but that being an only child with a stern father, I was scared of the bogeymen in the dark ... and I kept them at bay by
... gurning at them.
Here's the kicker. I still gurn, having discovered something fundamental about it.
For me anyway, it's instant therapy. Give me two minutes alone and I can absorb any shock, any disappointment, any insult or embarrassment and come back smiling.
I know why it works too - because the facial muscles are rooted so deep in the Old Brain they operate without thought like a broom to clear the trash out of the frontal lobes.
Try it and see for yourself with or without a mirror. The faster you pull your faces the sooner the therapy works - for me.
The idea : a graduate student might see this and do some research into "gurning as therapy" and a web-page might be started.
The domain name says it all.
http://www.facialworkout.com/ 'The appearance of the face is affected by many factors that it experiences daily.' [angel, Jul 16 2001, last modified Oct 06 2004]
Egremont's World Gurning Contest
http://www.whitehaven.org.uk/gurn.html The Crab Fair's Gurners [oneoffdave, Oct 06 2004]
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Annotation:
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The stress-relief [for me] comes only after creating a rapid series of faces and hand gestures [they help]. |
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One is capable without any thought at all, of making up a dozen differing faces in as many seconds. I daresay the use of the word gurn in gurn therapy is misleading. Hm. |
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Videotaping multiple-production of faces would assist research. |
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I recently looked up "gurning" in the Oxford English dictionary, having developed a burning curiousity about "gurning lackwits". I found only a referral to "girn", defined as "To show the teeth in rage, pain, disappointment, etc.; to snarl as a dog; to complain persistently; to be fretful or peevish. Also to girn at." |
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I was pleased to stumble upon this much unappreciated contribution to the HB. Girn is supposedly derived from grin - wandering far from the meaning laid out here. Is it the same word? Maybe it is Cornish? |
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Egremont in Cumbria has a fair every year where gurning is a major event [see link]. |
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