http://www.facefocused.com/proporpos.html When the tongue is low and the teeth and lips are apart at rest, crowded teeth, gummy smiles, recessive chins, and long faces result. If the tongue is positioned between the back teeth, the upper front teeth come down too far, resulting in a deep bite situation (upper teeth covering all or most of the lower teeth), and often a gummy smile. Changes in the balance of the face and the teeth vary in severity depending on the degree of departure from proper oral posture. There is also a strong relationship between the distance the lips are apart at rest and instability of an orthodontic result, as well as continual unfavorable facial balance changes throughout life.
I have lip incompetence and all I know is that my tongue kind of just hangs in my mouth. Puts horrible strain on my jaw muscles and feels awkward. Luckily my surgery is in june to fix it all
My lip incompetence didnt occur till after I got braces in high school and I think my maxilla continued growing vertically into my early 20s because I never noticed it untill a few years ago. Currently almost 25. Do males jaws grow till there early 20s? I know there always changing as you get older, but do they finish maturing in the 20s?
I dont know if a lot of people know, but the tongue is basically closes the circuit of musculature in the body. I suffer from neck pain and its almost all gone from stretching my tight muscles and fixing my posture. What ive noticed though is that if I force my mouth closed and keep my tongue on my palate, it fixes my remaining neck pain. It makes my neck feel more stable. Theres actually an exercise you can do to strengthen your deep strap muscle in your front neck. You stand butt and head against a wall, tuck your chin in, and at the same time, push your tongue hard against the roof of your mouth and drive your head against the wall. Youll feel the muscles working deep in the front of your neck. Sorry, got off topic lol.