What Facial Features Suggest a Naturally Affectionate Personality?
How can you identify a romantic type—someone emotionally rich yet changeable, quick to give and receive affection, prone to intruding on others, and easily tempted—whose behavior can affect the emotional quality and marriages of both themselves and others? Simply noting the eyes, nose, brows, and ears is not enough to reveal a person’s hidden emotional tendencies or psychological makeup. You need to assess the face as a whole, weighing multiple features together, filtering out noise, and making subtle comparisons to arrive at a basically accurate understanding of a person and their inclinations.
For fellow enthusiasts’ reference, we’ve listed some surface-level facial indicators. If someone shows three or four of the following traits, they may be a romantically inclined person who has difficulty maintaining emotional stability.
- A forehead marked by short, deep wrinkles;
- Dull, watery-looking eyes—fish-like, almond-shaped, round, or asymmetrical;
- A low, sunken nose bridge with a fleshy tip;
- A wide space between the eyebrows and eyes, with a protruding or puffy surface;
- Puffiness at the outer corners of the eyes (the "cunning door");
- A large mouth with thick lips, slack corners, and slightly drooping flesh;
- Fine, short, straight lines on both sides of the mouth;
- Deep crow’s-feet at the outer corners of the eyes;
- A fleshy, swollen nose tip with dark spots or moles;
- Large, thick ears with protruding earlobes that hang down;
- Moles or dark spots at the outer or inner corners of the eyes;
- Specks or patches in the whites of the eyes;
- Long ear hair appearing before middle age;
- Eyebrows growing excessively long before middle age;
- Eyebrows that look oily, jet-black, and shiny.