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Health & Fitness

Different Emotions Reveal Changes in Tears

All tears are not created equal.

Your body produces three different types of tears:

1. There’s the basal variety, which are made as a form of lubrication and protection for your eyes. These are constantly secreted in tiny quantities of about one gram over a 24-hour period. These tears coat your eyes when you blink.

2. You also produce reflex tears. These are another form of protection and are released in response to irritants, such as wind, dust, smoke or cut onions.

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3. The third form of tears are emotional or “psychic” tears as they’re sometimes referred to. These tears are arguably the most talked about and the most mysterious.

Your tears, no matter what the form, are a combination of salt water, oils, antibodies and enzymes. Yet each looks vastly different when analyzed chemically or viewed under a microscope.

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Intriguing Photos Reveal The Topography of Tears:

In a project called “Topography of Tears,” photographer Rose-Lynn Fisher used a microscope to examine what dried human tears look like close up. Over the course of several years, she examined more than 100 tears, from herself, volunteers and even a newborn baby, under a microscope.

What resulted was a beautiful collection of strikingly different images, many resembling large-scale landscapes. Fisher described them as “aerial views of emotion terrain.” The forms that the dried tears take depended on the emotions behind them. Tears of “laughing till I’m crying,” tears of grief, tears of change, onion tears and others all appear remarkably different.

Do Emotions Change the Structure of Our Tears?

Tears contain unique substances depending on their cause.
Emotional tears, for instance, contain leucine-enkephalin, a natural painkiller your body releases in response to stress. There are, however, other explanations for why each dried tear takes on a unique appearance under a microscope.

Crying Really Does Make You Feel Better… Eventually:

Research is mixed on whether crying is good for your emotional state. Some studies have found it to enhance mood while others suggest it actually has a negative effect. New research published in Motivation and Emotion may explain some of this ambiguity, as the study found crying may lead to both worsened and heightened mood, depending on when your mood is measured.

The research involved 60 people who watched an emotional movie and had their moods assessed immediately after as well as 20 and 90 minutes later. Those who cried during the film had significantly increased negative moods right after while non-criers’ moods remained unchanged.
By the next measurement, the criers’ moods had returned to baseline but, interestingly, by the final measurement their moods had not only recovered but also were enhanced compared to their pre-film measurements. So while crying might initially make you feel worse, it may ultimately boost your mood. The researchers explained - “After the initial deterioration of mood following crying that was observed in laboratory studies, it apparently takes some time for the mood, not just to recover, but also to become even less negative than before the emotional event, which corresponds to the results of retrospective studies.”

Separate research has also suggested that crying is more likely to make you feel better if you have an emotional-support person nearby (such as a close friend). Crying may also improve your mood if it helps you to come to a new understanding about your situation or if it’s due to a positive event.

Crying either alone or with one other person tends to be helpful while crying among unsupportive people, or crying that makes you feel embarrassed, tends to worsen mood.

Tears Are an Important Form of Communication:

Crying is an especially important form of communication for infants, who use tears to show they’re in need of comfort or care. However, tears also convey emotion into adulthood. Not only do tears tend to heighten the facial appearance of sadness, but they may also make others more willing to provide you with support.

Tearing up or crying can be “used” to build and strengthen personal relationships because it signals to others that your defenses are down, you’re less of a threat, and it may evoke feelings of empathy in others. Researcher Oren Hasson explained - “My analysis suggests that by blurring vision, tears lower defenses and reliably function as signals of submission, a cry for help, and even in a mutual display of attachment and as a group display of cohesion.”

Interestingly, crying may even play a role in helping you identify your own feelings.

Why Do Women Tend to Cry More Than Men?

There are differences between crying and gender, too. Women cry 30 to 64 times a year compared to men’s 6 to 17 times. Women also tend to cry for about twice as long as men during an episode (about six minutes per crying session for women compared to two or three minutes for men).
The reason women cry more often than men may be purely physiological. Most women have shallower tear ducts than men, which means they overflow faster and easier than men’s.

It’s also been suggested that hormonal differences may be to blame; testosterone appears to inhibit crying while prolactin, found in higher levels in women, promotes it. There are also marked cultural differences when it comes to crying. According to the APA - “A study of people in 35 countries found that the difference between how often men and women cry may be more pronounced in countries that allow greater freedom of expression and social resources, such as Chile, Sweden, and the United States. Ghana, Nigeria, and Nepal, on the other hand, reported only slightly higher tear rates for women.”

Lead study author Dianne Van Hemert, PhD, a senior researcher at the Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research, says that - “People in wealthier countries may cry more because they live in a culture that permits it, while people in poorer countries, who presumably might have more to cry about, don’t do so because of cultural norms that frown on emotional expression.”

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