If you followed even part of the 2026 Winter Olympics, you likely saw Alysa Liu’s name rising again and again — not only for her skating, but for the quiet force of a comeback years in the making.
At just 20, the Team USA star delivered a performance marked by control and resolve, capturing gold in the women’s singles competition on February 19, after helping secure team gold earlier in the Games. It was a milestone moment — the first American women’s individual Olympic gold in figure skating in more than two decades — and it carried extra weight because of where she had been.
After stepping away from competition in 2022 from exhaustion and burnout, Liu returned in 2023 with steadier footing and renewed focus. Her victory wasn’t loud. It was earned.
Yet as often happens in moments of public triumph, attention drifted to something smaller.
During the medal ceremony, cameras caught a glimpse of two tiny silver studs above her upper teeth — a “smiley” piercing, placed through the thin skin connecting the lip to the gums, visible only when she smiled. Within hours, the image spread online, drawing curiosity, admiration, and concern in equal measure.
In a past interview, Liu shared that she had pierced it herself with help from her sister. The story added to the viral momentum — a young champion, confident, independent, unafraid to make her own marks both on and off the ice.
But the attention soon turned toward health.
Dental professionals cautioned that oral piercings carry higher risks than many people realize. The mouth is naturally full of bacteria, and metal jewelry in constant contact with teeth and gums can lead to infection, swelling, enamel damage, gum recession, and in some cases serious complications requiring medical treatment. What looks small and stylish can quietly wear down what the body cannot easily replace.
The message wasn’t meant to shame — only to slow the rush toward imitation.
Experts emphasized that impulsive or DIY piercings raise those risks even further, and that anyone considering oral jewelry should speak with a qualified dental professional first. Proper care can reduce danger, but it cannot remove it entirely.
Liu’s achievements remain the heart of the story — a young athlete who stepped back, gathered herself, and returned stronger. The conversation around her piercing simply opened a wider reminder: our bodies are not trends, and choices made lightly can echo longer than expected.