The sneeze center is a part of the brain that not many people have heard of. If the inside of your nose gets a tickle, then the sneeze center alerts all the other muscles that work together to sneeze. Sneezing is a reflex. A reflex is where your body does something automatically and is something that you have no control over. Sneezing is a way that your body gets rid of bad things that are in your nose. These things might be bacteria, germs, and other things. You also sneeze when you smell pepper because your body does not like pepper!
When you suddenly you see a bright light like the sun or a light bulb then you feel like you are going to sneeze. Most people feel like you do when you see the light. Actually 1 out of 3 people sneeze when they see the bright light. Those people are "Photic Sneezers." Photic really is another word for light. Photic sneezing is something that you get from one of your parents because it is something that runs in one side of your family.Some people can sneeze with their eyes open and some people can’t. Sneezing is a reflex and so is closing our eyes. We have no control over whether or not we close our eyes when we sneeze. Some people don’t have reflex, so when they sneeze then their eyes won’t close. Some people try to close their eyes so when they sneeze their eyes won’t pop out. Your eyes don’t really pop out. People without the reflex to sneeze with their eyes open can try to train themselves to sneeze with their eyes open. One good way to do this is if when you sneeze you hold your eyes open.People think that when you close your eyes when you sneeze that you are blocking germs and bacteria. That is not true because your eyes deal with germs all the time. If you close your eyes during a sneeze, then it is just a reflex. During this part of the sneeze, we tense some of our muscles. The tensing (tightening) of our muscles causes our eyes to shut. People that sneeze a lot can prevent sneezing. If you feel a sneeze, then use saline solution. You can also softly hold your nose at the end. These things can help your body remove things it does not want without sneezing.No one knows the reason you close your eyes when you sneeze. There are many possibilities. Some people think it is to protect your eyes from flying goop. Most doctors think that it is still a reflex, or we just can’t help it.Sneezing is very good for you and your body because it removes things from your body like bacteria and germs. It also is good because it keeps the tubes that carry the air from your nose to the lungs healthy. Sneezing makes your nose clear when you have a cold.
2007-03-20 17:16:57
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answer #1
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answered by Byzantino 7
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"A sneeze is simply an involuntary nervous response to nasal irritation. The sneeze impulse affects a variety of body parts, including the abdomen, chest, neck, and face. During a sneeze, the impulses that travel through your face cause your eyelids to blink. This response is entirely automatic. There's nothing you can do about it. Sneezing puts a lot of pressure on your head and respiratory system, so blinking is probably a protective mechanism."
Also... IT IS A MYTH that your eyes will pop out if you keep them open when you sneeze. "Our eyes are actually very secure in their sockets and, as the sockets are made out of bone and not connected to your nasal passages, the pressure of a sneeze does not affect them. For the eye to pop out there would have to be a muscle behind the eyes that contracted when you sneeze. The only muscles in the eyes are positioned at the front of the socket--and those are firmly holding your eyeballs in place."
2007-03-20 10:54:55
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answer #2
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answered by Mary 3
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Because of the force of a sneeze, eyes tend to shut as an involuntary safety response thus sneezing with ur eyes open is not really in ur hands.
2007-03-20 16:39:20
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answer #3
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answered by pinu 4
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I herd about this a long time ago.
After 20 years of trying last year I managed to sneeze and keep my eyes open.
2007-03-22 21:32:40
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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i think of you could prepare it ;-) What seems to take place is that as quickly as there's a sneeze, this strongly dominates the sensations of the physique on the time it happens. As you could understand, there's a nerve, referred to as the trigeminal nerve, that is going to around the attention and the cornea, and likewise to the top of the nostril. that's possibly that, once you sneeze, very sturdy electric powered impulses run on your trigeminal nerve. Now as you could understand, something place, for eyelids, is is closed - you pick a unsleeping attempt to maintain them open. So what might take place is that, once you sneeze, the impulse is so dominant, that it sort of "cancels out" the impulse that regularly keeps the eyelids open. yet lower back, i've got tried, it sort of feels which you will prepare your self to no longer close your eyes whilst sneezing (regardless of the undeniable fact that i might choose numerous prepare to be perfect ;-) in spite of everything, as quickly as we sneeze we are much less attentive to our environment, and if we proceed shifting shall we doubtlessly harm ourselves slightly, and so having closed eyes reduces the possibility of harm to the eyes, which seems sturdy, no? desire this enables
2016-10-02 11:29:41
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It's part of the sneezing reflex. Otherwise you'd be feeling around on the floor for your eyes every time you sneezed.
2007-03-20 10:54:55
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answer #6
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answered by John's Secret Identity™ 6
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its a natural (and needed) reaction. when u sneeze, its traveling over 100 mph.....if our eyes were open when we sneezed, the pressure and speed would cause our eyes to pop out of their sockets.
2007-03-20 10:59:05
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answer #7
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answered by Lexa♥ 2
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The closing of the eyes is the body's protective response, to prevent the eyeballs from popping out from our heads.
2007-03-21 12:09:07
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answer #8
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answered by duels 1
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i think it's the body's natural reaction to the force of shock caused by sneezing.
2007-03-20 10:54:13
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answer #9
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answered by i hate undies! 4
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I once heard that there is an actual possibility of our eyes being pushed from their sockets from the force, but only slightly. But this of course has not been proven.
2007-03-20 13:20:25
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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