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Smile mask syndrome
・ Smile Mission
・ Smile Network International
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・ Smile of a Child TV
・ Smile or Die
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・ Smile Paradise
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・ Smile Smile


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Smile mask syndrome : ウィキペディア英語版
Smile mask syndrome

, abbreviated SMS, is a psychological disorder proposed by professor Makoto Natsume of Osaka Shoin Women's University, in which subjects develop depression and physical illness as a result of prolonged, unnatural smiling.〔Belkin, Lisa. "(Putting Some Fun Back Into 9 to 5 )", ''New York Times'', March 6, 2008〕 Natsume proposed the disorder after counselling students from the university in his practice and noticing that a number of students had spent so much time faking their smiles that they were unaware that they were smiling even while relating stressful or upsetting experiences to him. Natsume attributes this to the great importance placed on smiling in the Japanese service industry, particularly for young women.〔 Previewed at (【引用サイトリンク】title=Seikatsunin Shinsho )
Smiling is an important skill for Japanese women working in the service industry. Almost all service industry companies in Japan require their female staff to smile for long periods of time.〔Leo Lewis, (Smiling can seriously damage your health ), ''The Times'', February 9, 2008〕 Natsume says that his female patients often talk about the importance of smiling when the topic of the conversation is on their workplace. He relates examples of patients saying that they felt their smile had a large effect on whether they were hired or not, and that their superiors had stressed the effect that good smiles had on customers.〔 According to Natsume, this atmosphere sometimes causes women to smile unnaturally for so long that they start to suppress their real emotions and become depressed.〔
Japanese author Tomomi Fujiwara notes that the demand for a common smile in the workplace emerged in Japan around the 1980s, and blames the cultural changes wrought by the Tokyo Disneyland, opened in 1983, for popularizing the demand for an obligatory smile in the workplace.〔
The smile mask syndrome has also been identified in Korea. Korean writer Bae Woo-ri noted that smiling gives one a competitive advantage over the others, and has become a necessary attribute of many employees, just like a "neat uniform."〔 Yoon-Do-rahm, a psychology counselor, compared the current society, full of smile-masks, to a clown show; both characterized by plentiful, yet empty and fake, smiles.〔
Smile mask syndrome can cause physical problems as well as mental ones. Natsume relates that many of his patients developed muscle aches and headaches as a result of prolonged smiling, and says that these are similar to the symptoms of repetitive strain injury.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Smile mask syndrome」の詳細全文を読む



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