TV
Brandi Glanville questions why LeAnn Rimes shared video of ‘painful’ deep jaw release therapy
Brandi Glanville threw a little shade at LeAnn Rimes over Rimes’ viral video undergoing deep jaw release therapy.
The “Blue” singer sobbed uncontrollably in self-care provider Human Garage’s Instagram video of her undergoing the 60-second procedure to relieve tension in her jaw.
Glanville said she saw the video during an episode of her podcast, “Unfiltered.”
The “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” alum said she herself had the procedure done “a million times” because she has TMJ — a disorder that can cause pain in the jaw joint and in the muscles that control jaw movement — and acknowledged that it is very painful.
However, she gave a shady look before musing that she must have a very high pain tolerance.
“I just don’t know why you share that,” she said of Rimes’ video.
When her co-host, James Maas, noted that Rimes was “sharing all of her health journey at the moment,” Glanville replied, “Oh, like me” — referring to her being candid with fans about her years-long facial parasite mystery.
“So weird,” she added with a shrug of her shoulders. “Well I hope she feels better. Um, yeah.”
Glanville, 53, of course has history with Rimes, 43. Glanville was married to Rimes’ husband, Eddie Cibrian, before he had an affair with the country singer. Rimes and Cibrian, 52, got married in April 2011.
In the clip of Rimes undergoing jaw release therapy, she moaned in pain as the professional, Garry Lineham, placed one of his hands inside her mouth while a second person held her head.
Rimes burst into tears as soon as the procedure was over, shocked by the results.
“Oh my God, you just don’t realize how much tension is in there,” Rimes said once she calmed down.
Lineham spoke to Fox News Digital and explained Rimes’ visceral reaction.
“We hold emotions in our body,” he said. “Emotions cause a sympathetic response or a stress response in the body.”
“Stress is one thing that impacts every disease, whether it’s emotional or physical, whether it is genetic,” he contunued. “Stress is the thing that makes genetics pop. If you take away stress, those genetic markers no longer express themselves.”
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