Our story is about a girl named Iris. Iris is very sensitive. So much that she is always in tears. She cries when she's sad, when she's happy, and even tears up when things just get to her. She has special lacrimal glands to make new tears and special tubes, called lacrimal puncta, to drain old ones away. And she cries so much that she goes through ten ounces of tears per day, 30 gallons a year! In fact, if you look closely, you'll see that she's crying a little bit all the time. The basal tears that Iris constantly produces form a thin coating of three layers, that cover her and keep dirt and debris away. Right next to Iris is the mucus layer, which keeps the whole thing fastened to her.