Allow me to point out some of the more delightful features:
- The gently snaking hand of the dental clamp, ensuring that my tooth did not shatter during surgery;
- The flexible steel spikes - although only three are visible, there were in fact four - each inserted all the way down into one carefully hollowed-out canal of my root; and
- My favourite, the sort of fluid elegance of the adjacent tooth's root, curling back, recoiling as it were in horror.
- Not pictured: a blue rubber dental dam, stretched and pinned across my mouth, and perforated to allow access to the one offending tooth. I have to say after my first experience with a dental dam, they seem like a very inexact form of protection - don't you agree that lesbians deserve some improved technology after all these years?
Wednesday will see the completion of this phase of the ordeal: a permanent filling - although, a crown will ultimately have to go over the whole mess, but not until I've saved for it. In the meantime, soups, puddings and purees and no teeth-clenching activities...well, almost none.
Oh, yes, this puts me in mind of one final detail, the most unexpected and perhaps also the most mortifying. After my procedure, T came to fetch me (which was awfully nice of him, though the aftermath was thankfully nowhere near as traumatic as the last time), and we left at around 12:30 pm, as many of the employees were leaving for lunch. The office is located in the gay village area, and as we were walking towards the subway station, a dental employee, an amiable young man who had had, on a previous visit, commerce with my mouth, suddenly overtook us, walking swiftly and with purpose in his eye. He did not notice me, or if he did, did not acknowledge. A few feet ahead of us, he turned down an alleyway - not just any alleyway, but a rather notorious one, as it contains the entrance to one of the city's most popular "gentleman's clubs", and sure enough, as we passed the alleyway, we saw him go right in. It took awhile for this to sink in; I wasn't sure if I had in fact seen it, but T confirms its truth. Am I a prude, or is it rather horrifying to discover that one's dental professional has a thing for lunch-time raunch? Of course, he uses gloves in his work, so really what's the harm? And yet, I am suddenly not looking forward to my next visit.
5 comments:
AAAAAAAHHHHHHUUUUUUGGGG!!!!!!
(running to brush and floss and polish and shine)
Oh and the gentlemans club gentleman? He must REALLY be into oral....
Good one!
I applaud the hygienist's determination...
That picture was shudder-inducing. Oh, my! They really should have given you nicer drugs. Canadians NEED, nay DESERVE, Vicodin post-surgery.
Your post is so timely as I just scheduled an appointment for late Januarary to have my first crown. I'm so happy to be putting my expected holiday money to something so fun and exciting.
OOOUUUCCCHHH
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