"I've Been Smiling For Four Hours"

As soon as she came in the door, she said quietly, "I've been smiling for four hours. I need to be alone."
Yow! Holy ghost of Marlene Dietrich!
But I definitely empathized with her, for I too, suffer from a terrible malady: smilitess.
What is smilitess, I feel you wondering. It's the disease of not being able to smile on cue. (Okay, I made it up, but it doesn't make it any less real.)
Ever since childhood, I've never been able to produce a smile on command. It's no wonder in my year book photos, I always looked pained and constipated. Part of it was my unwillingness to show my teeth. I'm not really sure why, but I remember being self-conscious about them.
Matters were only made worse when the photographer attempted humor.
"Okay, say 'cheese.'"
Nothing.
"Well, let's forget the cheese...say 'grillled cheese sammitch!'"
Again, not funny. But I could tell we were going to be there all day if I didn't attempt to crack a smile.
Later, my parents said, "Mercy! You call that a smile? You look like you're about to cry! Open your mouth!"
This problem has plagued me all my life. The only time I feel an unforced smile is when someone makes me laugh, no easy task.
Several years ago, I worked a booth at a horror convention in Washington pimping my books. By the end of the first day, I felt a TMJ headache forming in my jaw from the constrictions of fake smiling for every potential customer. Hardly worth the effort. I looked like the Joker. Or worse, one of the victims in last year's horror film, Smile.

So beware. The next time someone says to me, "smile for the camera," I think I'm in my full right as a tax-payer to protect myself and smash the phone.

