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We are all instructed by our dentists that in order to practice proper oral hygiene that we must floss all of our teeth once per day, generally at night before we lay down to sleep. If you can find me one person who is actually fond of this habit, please let me know. Because a community consensus generally is partial to the latter: that notion being, that everybody dislikes this necessary routine.

Top Five Reasons We All Can’t Stand Flossing Our Teeth

It’s time consuming: The last thing anybody wants to have to do is get their hands full of dental floss just before they go to sleep. For myself, I am always tired. Having to do the routine is something that I put off until the last minute. And to be honest, many of us will forego flossing and just brush our teeth, making mental promises to do it the following evening.

Your Gums can bleed: This is perhaps the most annoying part of flossing your teeth; it can make your gums bleed. Then you are spitting out blood into the sink, and that awful taste of blood remains in your mouth, forcing you to have to add to the routine with a bottle of mouthwash before you get some shuteye.

The Dental Floss Tears on Your Teeth: Most flossing people can relate to this quip: it gets stuck on your teeth and rips. So that nice strand of floss that you just pulled from the dispenser is ruined. You must now waste more floss that will ultimately tear as well.

The Floss Gets Stuck Behind Fillings: This is horrible when it happens. If you have fillings that jut out on your teeth, or are near the spaces between your teeth, floss can easily get stuck behind the filling. Then you find yourself brushing your teeth once more just to remove the left behind floss.

It’s Hard to Reach the Rear Teeth: The rear teeth are always buggers to floss. Your hand strains as far back into your mouth as possible, and still, you find it hard to get those suckers flossed. Then just when you do, it gets stuck on the teeth or caught on a filling, or tears.

The Easier Solution: Use a water jet, water pick or waterpiq teeth cleaner. These are handheld devices that have a reservoir that holds water. It is projected out a slim nozzle at a rapid pace and has been clinically proven to be up to 80% more effective than flossing. Just water. No string. No tearing. Just easier, one, two, and three—and then you can go to bed knowing your dentist would be proud of you! And here is the real kicker: I was looking at a variety of these devices and they cost about the same as a one year supply of dental floss. But they last a lot longer than one year. Most offered a two year warranty. So another added benefit would be that you save more money by water flossing your teeth over the latter. Isn’t technology wonderful?

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So a year or three ago, my right top bicuspid (?! the fourth one back from center) started talking to me about dental health. Sensitivity to cold, sometimes to hot, the tooth aching… I hesitated about going to the dentist. “Hesitate” not in the sense of look left, right, and jump off the diving board. “Hesitate” in the sense of waiting about 250,000 minutes (six months) before acting.

Why wait so long, you ask? That’s the point, we sez. Why indeed.

Six months on, I hustle in. I take the half day off, I sit there and get the weird cardboard things that pinch your gums, they do the X-rays, they tut-tut at whatever they see that they don’t like… don’t you floss daily, you cretin? … large, large commitment of time and energy to have this thing looked at. From my point of view. (Do dentists listen to chiropractors about proper spinal care?)

One time I went to the doctor. He diagnosed diverticulitis… by pushing on my tummy, letting it bounce up, and asking whether it hurt when it bounced back up. I was in and out in a couple of minutes, and it was a pleasant conversation, too.

…………………

Intermission: I like dentists, personally. If I were 20 again, I might go become a dentist: you’re a doctor without the prostate checks and appendectomies and all that kind of stuff. I don’t know how they’re supposed to make visits faster and more pleasant.

Steve Martin

………………….

Anyway: first time I go in about the bicuspid, they do the X-rays and tell me that nothing is wrong with my tooth. Must just be sensitive.

When I was young and just a bad little kid.
My mama noticed funny things I did.
Like shooting puppies with a BB gun.
I’d poison guppies, and when I was done,
I’d find a pussycat and bash in it’s head,
Thats when my mama said

(Backup Singers) What did she say?

She said, my boy I think some day,
will find a way,
To make your natural tendencies pay.

(Chorus)
You’ll be a dentist. (You’ll be a dentist)
You have a talent for causing great pain.
Son, be a dentist. (Son, be a dentist)
People will pay you to be inhumane. (Inhumane)

Okay. Several more months and it gets worse. How much worse? I go to a different dentist — a discount dentist who speaks English rather poorly, who has halitosis and who is quite impolite to me. Dentist #2 does the bitewings, and talks with me while I have the cardboard in my mouth, and I try to tell him all about the case history of the tooth.

He’s not interested. “You cannot trust what a patient tells you about what he is experiencing,” he says rather irritatedly. (Don’t get me wrong. He’s just a guy doing a job, and I’m sure he was right.)

He can’t find a thing on the X-rays. Finally he says, there may be a micro-something or other. Microhole? Microfissure? Micro return on my investment, is the point here. :- ) I don’t have insurance.

I imagine that dentists very self-conscious about causing pain and about your not wanting to go see them. I dunno. I ain’t sayin’ I won’t go fishin’ with the man. I’m just saying if I have a better alternative, such as blogging about cavities, I’ll do that first …

………………..

Maybe three or four months later, I take a swig of coffee and get an ELECTRIC shock in my tooth. Had to pull the car over. Lasted, I dunno, two or three minutes. Man, was I glad for that to finally stop. Was careful for a day or so … later that week, another cup of coffee and BANG-O another ELECTRIC shock that runs all the way up my face.

After that, it didn’t hurt any more. I surmised, later, this was the root of the tooth dying.

………………..

The cavity got worse and worse; first I used a waterpik to clean it, and later I chewed a toothpick to the proper width to get up in there and clean particles out of the cavity. The cavity is, now, I would estimate, 20% of the volume of my tooth itself. Where there should be a root, and dentin, and a pulp cavity (are those the right terms?), there’s whistling air.

Minor abscess?  I got so good at draining it that it was like flipping my hair back unconsciously … I know, I know. What am I thinking.

Somehow the infection has never given me a day’s cold or flu. Hasn’t affected my system at all.

……………….

I’ll go back to the dentist, eventually.

Through nobody’s fault, I just don’t feel confident that things will get fixed right. I’m way too busy to commit half a day and not get it taken care of anyway.

I picture myself going in, and asking to have the tooth filled, and having the dentist take control of the conversation and tell me what I need done… not only on that tooth, but on every tooth. Doctors let me keep control. Dentists resist everything I say. It feels like trying to not take out the garbage after my wife has clearly instructed me to do so.

……………….

What to do about the syndrome? I dunno. But I’ve toldja why I don’t go. Takes too long, and the guy will argue with me about everything, and who knows if it’ll be worth the time.

I’ll go when I absolutely have to. :- )

Cheers,

Jeff

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Welcome to Klat Talk. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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