LeAnn Rimes may be known for her singing voice, but she just went viral for sobbing.

On Sunday, the “Nashville 911” star underwent a “deep jaw release” that, as the video below demonstrates, was very intense, but also very healing.

Despite Rimes being emotional while having the procedure, she liked the after-effects and remarked, “Oh, my God, you just don’t realize how much tension is in there.”

Garry Lineham of Human Garage, a Los Angeles-based self-care provider specializing in fascial maneuvers, appeared to perform the procedure on Rimes by seemingly reaching into her mouth to adjust and move her jaw around.

The video description notes that the body often stores stress in the jaw and “when we hold back our voice or push through pressure, the fascia in the face and neck ‘locks’ to protect us.

“By using the maneuvers to signal safety to the nervous system, we can finally allow that stored energy to move,” the post said.

Meanwhile, Rimes reacts to the manipulation by repeatedly saying, “Oh, my God,” before bursting into tears when the procedure is complete.

“Say that part of my life is over,” Lineham tells her, and Rimes responds, “That part of my life better be over.”

A post shared by Human Garage (@humangarage)

Rimes’ decision to release the tension in her jaw comes nearly 10 months after her front dental bridge fell out during a performance in Bow, Washington.

In a video she posted after the incident, she noted, “If you’ve been around, you know I’ve had a lot of dental surgeries, and I have a bridge in the front, and it fell out in the middle of my song.”

Rimes has reportedly had around 29 dental surgeries since she got veneers as a teen, and she revealed that a dentist later failed to bond the veneers properly when she had them redone. For about a decade, she has been trying to correct the damage with multiple root canals and oral surgeries.

“I look at my pictures from that time, and my face was so different—it was just so swollen,” she told TheFlowSpace.com last year. “Oh, it was awful. I was in chronic pain for, like, two-and-a-half years.”

You can see an additional clip of her jaw release below.

A post shared by Garry Lineham (@garrylineham)

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