How are these definitely-not-generic-stock photo people feeling?
Are they neutral, ashamed, stoically handsome? Sometimes it can be a little hard to tell.
But if we add a few tears to these facial expressions, voila - these people look super
sad.
When we see faces get all contorted and messed up and liquid leaking out of eyeballs, that
sends a clear, unambiguous emotional message.
Because we are the only animal that cries.
Why?
[OPEN]
Pain.
All of these things can make people cry.
This reaction makes sense when say, dust, gets into your eye, which always seems to
happen when I watch the beginning of Up.
[sigh pause thought bubble scene] You make tears to flush your eye clean.
But what’s the point of making tears when we’re sad?
Why did humans evolve emotional crying?
Tears of sadness are called emotional or psychic tears.
They differ from reflex tears, which we make to flush our eyes in response to irritants.
We even make a third type of tear, basal tears: a liquid force-field we’re constantly producing
to protect and lubricate our eyes.
Each tear type has a different recipe.
All three contain salt, proteins, and antibacterial enzymes, but emotional tears have higher amounts
of protein, including stress hormones and natural painkillers that we don’t yet know
And while all three are secreted from the lacrimal glands in your eye, only the production
of emotional tears is controlled by the hypothalamus - an area of your brain that regulates emotional
Across cultures, aside from speaking, humans communicate with each other in many ways:
through gestures, posture, even touch.
But we tend to read other people’s emotions through their face.
We have over 40 muscles in our face alone, capable of deforming our appearance in a number
Like blushing, laughing, and teenage eye-rolling, before we had language, it’s possible tears
evolved as a way to send a message to people close to us that we were experiencing strong
Individuals that could clearly and reliably communicate sadness were more likely to receive
help, which increased the likelihood they would survive and reproduce.
We can’t know for sure, but it makes evolutionary sense.
A baby can’t tell you that they’re hungry, tired, or uncomfortable, because they can’t
talk, so tears are effective baby communication.
But humans keep crying into adulthood.
Adults don’t cry with as much noise as babies do, THANKFULLY… can you imagine?
But our grown up eyes still shed tears.
Studies show that most people that see tears, want to help.
That’s because, while evolving tears, we also evolved a response to them: feelings
We tend to see a crying person as helpless and feel more connected to them.
These feelings likely helped us develop social bonds.
That innate response is why you probably felt different when we added tears to these pictures.
Lots of animals make tears, but as far as we know, we’re the only animals to cry emotional
Other animals have distinct facial expressions to communicate fear or pain, but no other
species that we know of has a sad signal quite like tears.
It’s true we also cry at happy things, and scientists don’t exactly know why.
Perhaps we’re just plain overwhelmed with emotions.
Or it could be that you’re actually crying at the sad part of the thing, like how weddings
and graduations signify the end of something, or when you’re happy to see someone because
There’s a lot we still don’t know about crying, but it’s clear that it’s one of