If you've noticed your jaw wandering to one side in the mirror when you open wide, you're not imagining it, and it's a specific enough symptom that it points toward a few likely causes.
Two different patterns: deviation vs. deflection
These terms get used loosely, but they describe genuinely different movements:
- Deviation: the jaw shifts off-center partway through opening but returns to the midline by the time the mouth is fully open.
- Deflection: the jaw shifts to one side and stays there, even at full opening — it doesn't correct itself.
Deviation is often linked to a temporary obstruction the jaw has to move around (like a disc that's slightly out of place but gets recaptured as you open further), while deflection more often points to a persistent restriction on one side, such as a disc that stays displaced or significant muscle imbalance.
Common causes
- Uneven bite contact: if certain teeth touch before others, the jaw naturally shifts to find a more comfortable closing position.
- One-sided chewing habits: consistently chewing on one side strengthens muscles unevenly, pulling the jaw in that direction over time.
- Disc displacement: the cushioning disc inside the joint slipping out of position creates a physical obstacle on one side, forcing the jaw to move around it.
- Inflammation or degenerative changes: arthritis or chronic inflammation on one side can restrict smooth movement asymmetrically.
What to do about it
A new or worsening shift is worth having evaluated by a dentist or TMJ specialist, since the underlying cause (bite, muscle, or disc-related) affects what actually helps. In the meantime, general jaw stabilization work like the Rocabado 6x6 Program can help build more symmetric muscle control, and if one-sided chewing is a habit you've noticed in yourself, consciously alternating sides is a simple, free thing to try.
Disc displacement is often the underlying mechanism behind this kind of shift — see our full disc displacement explainer for more detail.