Need to touch your face: Where do you come from?

You see a pimple and decide to squeeze it. If you don't make it the first time, try it again and again until something inside you says you enjoyed it. Then, when you put the make-up, you pick it up again, it doesn't look good under the cover dust. Before you know it, there is a pit on your face and [...]
You see a pimple and decide to squeeze it. If you don't make it the first time, try it again and again until something inside you says you enjoyed it. Then, when you put the make-up, you pick it up again, it doesn't look good under the cover dust. Before you know it, there's an unpleasant hole on your face which makes-up is impossible to cover.
Skin harassment is something that each of us has tried and psychologists say they share this type of habit in: “correction and syndrome”.
Most people fall into the Sindorma category. These are the people who get the skin on once in a while. When there has been constant effort to break the habit, and the process has been anxious, it is the behavior of the disorder. Patients can avoid participating in other activities because a large scar is left on their faces or because they need more time to molest their faces.
While there is no known cause, it is believed that the disorder can be genetic. According to experts, this is most evident in anxious people. Many people use it as an emotional regulator. It becomes the coping mechanism of frustration, anxiety, and feeling of fear and tension.
The same is true of people who fall into the syndrome category, but the difference is the guilt. Patients with disorder report that they are pleased to squeeze in a rash but then feel guilty. This practice may seem harmless at first, but it leads to infection and the failure of facial marks.
The only message? If you want good skin, zero marks, and a life without addiction, keep your hands off your face.
Source Layer: Pop Sugar










