One big eye, one small eye ever since China?
Q. My eyes have always been uneven for about a year, the right eye had triple eye-lid while the other had double. During the summer, I went back to Hong Kong, which was a very humid place. My right eye's triple-eye lid automatically corrected itself to a double, but the double eye-lid seems so much thicker. Now my right eye seems more lifted and shows more white, what should I do to even my eye-sizes out? I guess it is not very noticeable in person, but does show a big difference between the size of my two eyes. Any suggestions?
A. If you've had it since you were little, it's probably just an underdeveloped eye. and it's not a big deal. You can kind of make it appear bigger by wearing a light eye shadow (pink perhaps) and in the inner corner wear white or silver eye shadow. On the rim of your upper eye lid wear eye liner as well. It just makes it appear larger. Makeup tricks are amazing.
or just Go to an eye doctor right away.It is glaucoma, which they were able to fix with some kind of ultra-sound surgery. But go now.
or just Go to an eye doctor right away.It is glaucoma, which they were able to fix with some kind of ultra-sound surgery. But go now.
How do you get rid of eyebags?
Q. I am born with eyebags. I'm the only one on both sides of my family who have Chinese-ish eyes with dark eyebags probably due to being born in Hong Kong. Im not chinese anyways. But, my eyebags never go away, they make me look mean, angry, tired and the sorts. Many people said I looked tired and/or mad. I've become embarassed and realized that maybe that's why no one sits next to me on the school bus that doesn't know me except for the people that really know me. Which makes me feel like crying. I deal with no one sitting next to me for the past few weeks. No one would start up a conversation with me until I would start it and they would feel they had to answer. So I strongly believe my eyebags cause me to be rather quite an eyesore. Help? Please no surgery or products. I'm 13. My family will think I'm worrying of nonsense. So please, something super easy to do with very long lasting effects. :) thank you!
A. Slice cucumber into thick slices. Cucumber slices have long been used to reduce puffiness and refresh the appearance of skin around the eyes, providing a fast "pick-me-up" for tired and puffy eyes. Place a slice over each eye, extending over the darkened area. Do this daily, coupled with lying down for 10-15 minutes. Keep your eyes closed.
Apply cool tea bags or an ice cube wrapped in soft cloth to your eyes daily. The tannin in tea bags reduces swelling and discoloration. Lie down, preferably in the morning, and leave the fresh, cool, damp, caffeinated tea bags (you can refrigerate them overnight so they�ll be ready) over your eyes for about 10-15 minutes. Keep your eyes closed.
Apply cool tea bags or an ice cube wrapped in soft cloth to your eyes daily. The tannin in tea bags reduces swelling and discoloration. Lie down, preferably in the morning, and leave the fresh, cool, damp, caffeinated tea bags (you can refrigerate them overnight so they�ll be ready) over your eyes for about 10-15 minutes. Keep your eyes closed.
Are Indians racially " Asians " ?
Q. Geographically,yes.Racially, or physically ? NO. 1000000% Noo way! My opinions on TRUEEE ASIANS??: Japanese, Koreans, Chinese, Vietnamese, Singaporean, Hong Kong, Thailand, Taiwan, and Philippines! True ASIANS RITE THERE. They all look SIMILAR. Yeah, some may have chinky eyes, tan skin, pale skin, Asian eyes but double eye lids, but one glance , you say in your head ," Oh it's an Asian." don't lie, when we see someone we first notice their gender, then their fatness, then guess their ethnicity. They just look quite SIMILAR. ALL ARE BORN IN A SOMEWHAT YELLOW SKIN TONE. Yeah over the years some get tan and most get lighter mostly in north Asia, but yeah. Indians? Okay let's compare a Chinese, shall we? No,no. Compare all south Asians with all the southeast and north an northeast Asians.
Asians: Yellow Indians: Brown
Asians: Asian eyes Indians-Caucasian eyes
Asians: petite mostly Indians- tall and big
Asians-Silky hair Indians- greasy or thick looking.
Asians:Barely hair Indians- Hairy arms And unities sometimes
Asians: Small sometimes flat nose Indians- huge and pointy, curving down.
Asians-high cheekbones Indians-Eh idk
Asians-straight eyelashes Indians- slightly bent
Asians- mongoloids Indians-aren't mogoloid
This is NOT directly from me. I read it off a poll/ article . Which is accurate.
Only one similarity I see with SOUTH Asians and the North,Northeast,Southeast Asians are, they eat rice! Now hate all you want, this is very accurate. This is not meant to offend anyone but many Indians claim being Asian, and I say. , yeah geographically and they say, no, racially too. And I have to make a rude rant -.-
Good day lovelies
Ps if u comment sh*t, I'm guessing UR
INDIAN and ur deeply offenses to learn
People think less
Of. U now. Don't worry, nothing but perfume and plastic surgery wouldn't fix ! ^^ UMAD BRO??!
Asians: Yellow Indians: Brown
Asians: Asian eyes Indians-Caucasian eyes
Asians: petite mostly Indians- tall and big
Asians-Silky hair Indians- greasy or thick looking.
Asians:Barely hair Indians- Hairy arms And unities sometimes
Asians: Small sometimes flat nose Indians- huge and pointy, curving down.
Asians-high cheekbones Indians-Eh idk
Asians-straight eyelashes Indians- slightly bent
Asians- mongoloids Indians-aren't mogoloid
This is NOT directly from me. I read it off a poll/ article . Which is accurate.
Only one similarity I see with SOUTH Asians and the North,Northeast,Southeast Asians are, they eat rice! Now hate all you want, this is very accurate. This is not meant to offend anyone but many Indians claim being Asian, and I say. , yeah geographically and they say, no, racially too. And I have to make a rude rant -.-
Good day lovelies
Ps if u comment sh*t, I'm guessing UR
INDIAN and ur deeply offenses to learn
People think less
Of. U now. Don't worry, nothing but perfume and plastic surgery wouldn't fix ! ^^ UMAD BRO??!
A. What is up with you and Indians? Are you Indian but you hate your culture :/? It's causing me to think you were powned by an Indian, causing you to write this racist rant .
Scary movies... what are your top ten scariest movies?
Q. My one friend and I are planning on having a scary movie night sometime soon, but we want actual scary movies, I know most people say the older ones are the most scary but I honestly don't get scarred easily, please keep more popular movies off your list seeing I've probably seen them and they weren't scary, just to give you an idea of what I've seen a serbian film, the human centipede, rosemarys baby, the excorsict, amityville horror. And others but I want legitimate scary movies, all on the list didn't even come close to scaring me.
A. For some reason I think foreign movies are scarier..
A tale of two sisters: Terrified sisters try to exorcise their home of two dark forces -- their evil stepmother and a vengeful entity -- in this ghostly tale. Hospitalized after their mother's death, young Su-mi (Im Su-jeong) and Su-yeon (Mun Geun-yeong) return home to find a nasty new stepmother (Yeom Jeong-ah). The girls suffer terrifying events, but their father doesn't care, even though evil lurks around every corner.
Silent Hill:Determined to save her terminally ill daughter (Jodelle Ferland) from death, Rose (Radha Mitchell) ignores the wishes of her husband and takes her to a faith healer. But her well-intentioned efforts somehow land them in an alternate reality. Now, Rose is in the deserted town of Silent Hill, where her daughter mysteriously disappears and she's left to search for her child in a world of darkness and shadow.
Premonition: On a family outing, Hideki Satomi (Hiroshi Mikami) comes across a news clipping containing his young daughter's obituary; trouble is, the girl isn't dead. Next thing you know, a freak accident kills her exactly as the article described. Fast-forward three years: When broadsheets again start delivering disastrous future news -- from slayings to train wrecks -- Hideki finds himself trapped in a living nightmare in this chilling horror flick.
Dorm: When 12-year-old Ton (Charlie Trairat) transfers to an all-boys boarding school, he's taunted by his peers and terrified by their tales about the ghosts that inhabit the school. Ton is utterly miserable -- until he befriends a mysterious fellow pupil (Sirachuch Chienthaworn). Songyos Sugmakanan helms this award-winning supernatural chiller from Thailand.
The Shining: On the wagon and out of lucrative work thanks to his alcoholism and family troubles, aspiring novelist Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) accepts a position as the off-season custodian at an elegant but eerie hotel so he can write undisturbed. But shortly after Jack, his wife (Shelley Duvall) and his young son (Danny Lloyd) settle in, the ominous hotel begins to wield its sinister power in this chilling horror classic helmed by Stanley Kubrick.
The eye: With help from her doctor (Alessandro Nivola) and her sister (Parker Posey), blind violinist Sydney (Jessica Alba) learns to see again after undergoing a corneal transplant. But the surgery leaves behind some creepy side effects, including the ability to see supernatural beings. Trouble is, no one believes her, drawing her sanity deeply into question. This thriller is a remake of the Hong Kong spine-tingler of the same name.
Fingerprints: A small town lies in limbo some 50 years after a horrific accident that saw a train plow into a school bus filled with children. Can a troubled teen (Leah Pipes) fresh out of rehab unlock the truth about what caused the terrible tragedy? Lou Diamond Phillips and Kristin Cavallari of MTV's "Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County" co-star in this supernatural thriller from screenwriting brothers Brian and Jason Cleveland.
The Orphanage:Fueled by fond memories from her childhood, Laura (Belén Rueda) persuades her husband (Fernando Cayo) to help her revamp a seaside orphanage into a facility for disabled children. But soon after the couple moves in, their son, Simón (Roger PrÃncep), begins exhibiting disturbing behavior. As Laura tries to understand Simón's increasingly malevolent actions, she becomes drawn into the house's terrifying secrets in this unnerving chiller
Shutter: Tun (Ananda Everingham), a photographer, and his girlfriend, Jane (Natthaweeranuch Thongmee), run over a young girl after a night of drinking and decide to flee the scene. The couple is haunted by the memory of their deadly choice, and soon, they notice their photos contain strange ghostly shapes. When several of Tun's friends die in mysterious circumstances, they realize that they may be haunted by more than just bad memories.
The Hills have Eyes: Traveling across the American Southwest en route to California, an unsuspecting suburban family is being tracked by a group of hill dwellers whose social skills have failed to evolve -- and who could attack them at any moment. If their vehicle breaks down, or if they stop to stretch their legs, their vacation could end in tragedy. Kathleen Quinlan, Vinessa Shaw, Emilie de Ravin and Dan Byrd co-star in this remake of the 1977 Wes Craven classic.
A tale of two sisters: Terrified sisters try to exorcise their home of two dark forces -- their evil stepmother and a vengeful entity -- in this ghostly tale. Hospitalized after their mother's death, young Su-mi (Im Su-jeong) and Su-yeon (Mun Geun-yeong) return home to find a nasty new stepmother (Yeom Jeong-ah). The girls suffer terrifying events, but their father doesn't care, even though evil lurks around every corner.
Silent Hill:Determined to save her terminally ill daughter (Jodelle Ferland) from death, Rose (Radha Mitchell) ignores the wishes of her husband and takes her to a faith healer. But her well-intentioned efforts somehow land them in an alternate reality. Now, Rose is in the deserted town of Silent Hill, where her daughter mysteriously disappears and she's left to search for her child in a world of darkness and shadow.
Premonition: On a family outing, Hideki Satomi (Hiroshi Mikami) comes across a news clipping containing his young daughter's obituary; trouble is, the girl isn't dead. Next thing you know, a freak accident kills her exactly as the article described. Fast-forward three years: When broadsheets again start delivering disastrous future news -- from slayings to train wrecks -- Hideki finds himself trapped in a living nightmare in this chilling horror flick.
Dorm: When 12-year-old Ton (Charlie Trairat) transfers to an all-boys boarding school, he's taunted by his peers and terrified by their tales about the ghosts that inhabit the school. Ton is utterly miserable -- until he befriends a mysterious fellow pupil (Sirachuch Chienthaworn). Songyos Sugmakanan helms this award-winning supernatural chiller from Thailand.
The Shining: On the wagon and out of lucrative work thanks to his alcoholism and family troubles, aspiring novelist Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) accepts a position as the off-season custodian at an elegant but eerie hotel so he can write undisturbed. But shortly after Jack, his wife (Shelley Duvall) and his young son (Danny Lloyd) settle in, the ominous hotel begins to wield its sinister power in this chilling horror classic helmed by Stanley Kubrick.
The eye: With help from her doctor (Alessandro Nivola) and her sister (Parker Posey), blind violinist Sydney (Jessica Alba) learns to see again after undergoing a corneal transplant. But the surgery leaves behind some creepy side effects, including the ability to see supernatural beings. Trouble is, no one believes her, drawing her sanity deeply into question. This thriller is a remake of the Hong Kong spine-tingler of the same name.
Fingerprints: A small town lies in limbo some 50 years after a horrific accident that saw a train plow into a school bus filled with children. Can a troubled teen (Leah Pipes) fresh out of rehab unlock the truth about what caused the terrible tragedy? Lou Diamond Phillips and Kristin Cavallari of MTV's "Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County" co-star in this supernatural thriller from screenwriting brothers Brian and Jason Cleveland.
The Orphanage:Fueled by fond memories from her childhood, Laura (Belén Rueda) persuades her husband (Fernando Cayo) to help her revamp a seaside orphanage into a facility for disabled children. But soon after the couple moves in, their son, Simón (Roger PrÃncep), begins exhibiting disturbing behavior. As Laura tries to understand Simón's increasingly malevolent actions, she becomes drawn into the house's terrifying secrets in this unnerving chiller
Shutter: Tun (Ananda Everingham), a photographer, and his girlfriend, Jane (Natthaweeranuch Thongmee), run over a young girl after a night of drinking and decide to flee the scene. The couple is haunted by the memory of their deadly choice, and soon, they notice their photos contain strange ghostly shapes. When several of Tun's friends die in mysterious circumstances, they realize that they may be haunted by more than just bad memories.
The Hills have Eyes: Traveling across the American Southwest en route to California, an unsuspecting suburban family is being tracked by a group of hill dwellers whose social skills have failed to evolve -- and who could attack them at any moment. If their vehicle breaks down, or if they stop to stretch their legs, their vacation could end in tragedy. Kathleen Quinlan, Vinessa Shaw, Emilie de Ravin and Dan Byrd co-star in this remake of the 1977 Wes Craven classic.
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Title Post: One big eye, one small eye ever since China?
Rating: 98% based on 3217 ratings. 4,8 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
Rating: 98% based on 3217 ratings. 4,8 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
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