Your eyeballs are probably quite symmetrical. It’s your skull that’s asymmetric and that’s true for all people. One eyeball can sit higher than the other one. The face is usually wider on one side compared to the other. We don’t usually see facial asymmetry when we look at other people. Likewise, most people don’t see you as asymmetrical. During embryological development, each side of the face develops independently from each other and eventually fuse in the midline. The human brain is accustomed to seeing a symmetry as being normal so we don’t really see it unless we’re specifically looking for it in a critical way. You probably don’t think I’ll be your friends and family as having facial asymmetry though All of them do. In my opinion, a symmetry has a little to do with facial aesthetics. Aesthetics is much more based on a sense of balance rather than symmetry. Beautiful things are often asymmetrical. Got any art museum and look at how many paintings or pictures or works of art are symmetrical and you’ll see very few. There’s no easy procedure to correct facial asymmetry. Simplistic, soft tissue approaches are only going to make things worse by creating two separate asymmetries. My best suggestion is you accept the way you look as being normal appropriate and attractive. Best, Mats Hagstrom MD