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1.

The diseases you suffer from

Researches done in the past show that our eye color has a direct connection to diseases such as
diabetes, melanoma and vitiligo. Blue eyed people tend to suffer less from vitiligo, A situation
where the brown color pigment disappears from certain parts of the body and leave marks that looks
bleached.
A situation where a persons eye are different colors, for example one brown and the other blue, might
show different diseases like Horner syndrome or Glaucoma Figmantrit. Further more, people who has
advanced diabetes might notice their eye color becomes darker.
2. Your personality
Research done in Australia, where 366 participants were checked, revealed that people with bright
eyes tend to be much more competitive and less empathic, friendly and generous than people
with dark eyes.
That might sound like an exaggeration, and could require more research to be done, but researchers
claim that this has to do with our evolutionary roots: thousands of years ago, our northern-european
ancestors thought blue eyed people are more attractive and ideal for mating. That might be why blue
eyed people are more competitive today.
3. The way you deal with pain
Some of the scientists claim that your eye color might suggest the pain threshold of your body. A
recent study showed that out of 58 women, those with bright eyes tend to experience less pain
while giving birth, compared to women with dark eyes.
These women not only experience less physical pain, according to the study, they also experienced
less anxiety, depression and negative thoughts.
Other studies show that the color of our eyes can also point out how much can we handle while
drinking alcohol. in the past, researches showed that light-eye people can drink larger amounts of
alcohol than dark-eyed people.
4. Your genetics

At 2008 scientists discovered that all blue-eyed people share a straight genetic link to the same father,
a man that had a genetic mutation 6,000-10,000 years ago. Until that time all humans had only
brown eyes. Mutation that affected the OCA2 gene made a change that shut-off the ability to make
brown eyes. the genetic change created some kind of switch that limits that ability to
produce melanin, which leads to blue eyes.
If you have blue eyes, you share the same ancestor with all the blue-eyed people around you.

5. How much can you be trusted


Is it possible that you can trust brown eyed people a lot more than bright-eyed ones? Researchers say
that people with brown eyes are significantly more reliable than people with blue eyes. however,
the reliability of a person might change by the shape of the face: Even though brown eyed peoples
faces were conceived to be more reliable than blue-eyed people, its not just the eye color that tipped
the balance towards brown eyes, but some other facial features as well.

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