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A New Wrinkle About Boomers Who Turn 60
Here’s a new wrinkle in reporting on those aging Boomers. Only 10% of face changes are wrinkles. Every feature on the face can change in ways that correspond to inner growth, like “mouth puckers” and eye angles. Rose Rosetree, America’s leading physiognomist should know. Not only because her face has changed in 20 meaningful ways plus wrinkles but because she spent nine years researching an eye-opening book on the subject, “Wrinkles Are God's Makeup.”
Sterling, Virginia (PRWEB) December 31, 2005 -- The most eye-catching angle about seniors hasn’t been covered yet in a major newspaper. Faces don’t just get old according to stereotypes--no more than they have particular characteristics related to weight or race. If we’ll only look, rather than assume, what will we find? Faces show cumulative changes that reveal the inner person, like the way compatible couples come to look alike.
Aging could become a trend to celebrate, rather than a means to enrich cosmetic surgeons.
America’s leading physiognomist has updated the 3,000-year-old Chinese tradition of reading faces for character. No topic has more celebrity tie-ins, or is a better way to make readers’ heads turn.
Is physiognomy too kooky for conservative readers? Rosetree’s interview for ABC news in Cincinnati was top-rated for the whole week, so this year they had her tape seven segments for Sweeps Week. And what do the Indianapolis Star, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and USA Today have in common? Reporters said their features on her work were among the most interesting they’d ever written. Yet so far only one tiny magazine has interviewed Rosetree on how faces change meaningfully over time. Easy to change that~
Thanks for considering an interview with a Baby Boomer who isn’t the least bit scared about what time does to her face.
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