Showing posts with label dentist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dentist. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2011

In The Chair


You'll be pleased to know, after my last missive about this, that I do not have any sort of condition that's going to make all of my teeth fall out.  Phew!

What I did have, it turns out, is a loose crown.

Can I just put it out there, first of all, that I take really good care of my teeth?  I do.  It just so happens that I have been blessed with an "unbalanced PH" in my mouth (this is what my mother tells me.  Though she is also the person who assured me as a teenager that I would eventually be tall, like all the other women in my family).  Anyhooo...I get cavities really easily, is what I'm saying.  Thankfully not in years have I had a full-fledged cavity (though that's also how long its been since I last went to the dentist), but the last round of work I had done involved several (yes, several) root canals and crowns.  One of which, lovely bugger, had come loose.

After letting it sort of wiggle around in my mouth the last couple weeks, the pain and annoyance got to be too much to bear, so I moved my dentist appointment up a couple weeks and was in the chair this Tuesday for the big event.

This dentist I found, as I said in my last post, is lovely.  He's this sweet young Indian guy, who works there dentist-ing away with his dad, who has had the business for years.  He's friendly, he remembers my name and my teeth, and he makes me feel like he knows what he's doing.  His assistant, who looks like she's about 17 and who kept grimmacing every time she put the little suction thing-y in my mouth because she kept suctioning my lips and cheek...did not make me feel so much that way.  But, okay.

We had decided, my lovely dentist and I, that "while we were in there" (ugh) he would not only replace the crown, but go ahead and replace some old fillings as well.  Why not?  It'll be a little party right there in my upper right mouth.  Hooray!

Have I mentioned that I hate having dental work done?  Have I mentioned that I had to take a few deep breaths in the car before I could even make myself take the long walk across the parking lot into the office?  Have I mentioned that my mouth doesn't open very wide so going to the dentist always makes my jaw ache?  Have I mentioned that the whole thing, the weird horror-movie chair and the terrible music and the smell of, uh, sickly sweet something and the office-park blinds on the windows, how it all makes me feel vaguely ill?  And how the fact that I usually know enough about what they're doing in my mouth to be very nervous, but not actually enough to keep my imagination from running wild?

Right, there's that.

So, needless to say, I had to institute some serious deep-breathing for my little dental adventure.  I believe the dentist, who knows I'm a yoga teacher, actually said as we were getting ready to begin, "Alright, time to get your meditation on."

So I focused on the slats of trees through the blinds, and not the nervous hovering assistant.  I focused on relaxing my hands every time I felt them clenching up into little balls of "god please let this novocaine be good" terror.  And I tried to breathe.  And then tried to breathe again.  And so on.

And as I was laying there, my mouth achingly open, just trying with all my might to stay present to the whole room, and not just to my upsetting narrative about my buzzing teeth, I thought about how life can feel this way sometimes.   How there are these moments in life when there is nothing to be done...where you've let the problem, the little nagging ache get big enough that now there's no choice but to turn it over to a professional...and so what do you do?  Life is just like, open your mouth please, and keep it open until I'm done.  I'm going to be sticking some saws and drills and stuff in there, and you can either sit still and make it easy, or you can freak out, and make it a lot worse.

And I thought about how often, in those times when I am being drilled or cut open or forced to sit with something uncomfortable in my day to day life, how I just (I mean let's just call a spade a spade) freak the fuck out.  And that if I handled the dentist the way I handled those things...my god, he would have to strap me down.

So why is it that in the dentist chair I know?  Why is it that there I can say, alright sweetie...just breathe.  It will pass.  And I listen to myself.  And maybe I come in and I come out, but I know, somewhere somehow, that this uncomfortable (painful) experience is an opportunity for me to sit with.  To breathe in the face of.  To open, to stretch just a little bit wider.

But be it a nagging THOUGHT, instead of a trip to the dentist, and this same, alright sweetie...just breathe, it will pass, gets met with a big ol' NO IT WILL NOT!! I am never going to feel better and I need to fix this right now, I need to get myself the hell out of this chair!!

Imagine if you went to the dentist and had a hysterical meltdown because some part of you actually thought you were going to be in the dentist's chair FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE.  That would, I think, make you a crazy person.  But this happens with emotions, with thoughts, all the time.

(Please tell me I'm not alone in this...)

But here's what I learned, Shanti-towners...I went to the dentist on Tuesday, I left that same day, and while my gums are still recovering from all the action they got, by and large, the experience is over.  Done.  Better.   Fixed.  And I'm sort of thinking, next time I'm faced with something I like about as much as I like my teeth getting drilled, I'm going to try--in the words of my lovely dentist--to get my meditation on.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Self Diagnose This!


Do not ever Google "adult loose tooth". Even if you've reached into your mouth to check out an achy molar and discovered that it's a little, um, jiggly and want to know what that means about the general health of your mouth.

Don't. Do. It.

Actually, don't--no matter what is bothering you, in what area of your mind or body--don't google it. And never, never ever ever, go to WebMD.

Once, a few years ago, I was having weird heartburn (which I never get) and at the same moment in time I just happened to be having squeezey tingly pain in my arm, and I decided to WebMD my symptoms:

Heart Attack.

Over and over again...WebMD told me I was having a heart attack. And though I KNEW with every fiber of my being that I was not, in no way shape or form having a heart attack...it still gave me the willies all day long.

Likewise, having googled "adult loose teeth", I found out, much to my horror, that I apparently have late-stage serious gum disease, and or some kind of major infection in my jaw that I could just feel was, at that moment, spreading to my brain, just waiting to kill me in my sleep.

And so, realizing that I had a full-fledged actual toothache on my hands, complete with loose and therefore life-threatening molar, I went into the following downward spiral:

1. This is going to cost me a lot of money, whatever it is.

2. Of course this would happen to me just as I'm getting a hold on all my finances and trying to squirrel away money for my upcoming wedding. Of course.

3. Why is this happening? What have I done to deserve this?

4. Oh my god, what if it's something really awful? What if I have to have a tooth removed and walk around looking like a homeless person?

5. I should have known this was coming. I've just been ignoring this...I should have gone to the dentist months ago.

6. Well, THAT'S obviously WHY this is happening. The universe is trying to show me that I can't ignore things without them blowing up in my face.

7. Oh my god, what else have I been ignoring?!

8.  I'm a bad person.

(Okay, I know that jump from #7 to #8 seems like a big one, but somehow in my mind this all seemed like a perfectly logical and obviously TRUE train of thought.) And this is when the D-R-E-A-D set in. For reals.

Luckily, I was not alone (or this could have escalated into full-scale Lia vs. Lia fight to the death) and my very wise (and very understanding) fiance advised me to, um, chill. And likewise advised me to just take logical adult action like, I don't know...finding a dentist?

But you see, Shanti-towners, I had a moment, even while he was telling me these very reasonable, logical things...I had a moment where I just felt like, "no, you don't GET it. I knooooow how these things work. I know how the body and the mind are linked. I know that illness and physical wack-a-doo-ness has a symbolic meaning! So, you just don't get it, man who loves me...something is WRONG not with my tooth, but with ME!"

And then I took a moment. And, I paused. And I asked myself, very simply: is this a helpful way of thinking about this?

I thought about my future children, the ones I hope to have someday, and I asked myself, are these the kinds of lessons I want to pass on? Do I want my poor hapless children to get an ear infection and, taking after their mommy, assume that it's some kind of blemish on their character?!

Um, noooo.

Do I actually believe that the connection between my emotional and mental life and my physical one should be wielded as a weapon? Just one more reason for me to feel BADLY about myself? No, no, and no.

So, okay. So I dropped it. I dropped it, I popped some advil, and I sat down in front of my computer to figure out how to get myself into a dentist's chair that very day. (As I still wasn't totally convinced that I didn't have a deadly brain infection). I called on some friends for recommendations, I called on Yelp for some recommendations, I called on 1-800-DENTIST for some recommendations and by 2pm I was in a chair, being shown x-rays of my throbbing tooth by a very sweet and lovely dentist who informed me that my tooth wasn't loose...the crown on my tooth was loose, and that yes, I had an infection, but no, it wasn't in my brain.

And the dentist was so NICE, and the receptionist was so NICE, and the guy at the pharmacy when I went to pick up my kill-the-infection drugs was so NICE and everyone, all day, was so helpful and encouraging that by the end of the day, not only did I not feel like my toothache was a curse, I was totally convinced it was a BLESSING.

My tooth will get fixed, which obviously needed to be done. I've found a dentist who I really like (whose dad, the senior dentist in the office, has been doing yoga all his life, fun fact). I'm finally going to get some low-cost dental insurance for me and my man, which is definitely something that needed to be done but which in no way would I have gotten it together to do had it NOT been for my achy face.

All good things.

And so it turns out, that if my sudden toothache had any message at all, it may not have been: you're a bad person who is ignoring things and this is your punishment, but instead: here is a gift, what will you do with it?

Here is a gift of a throbby tooth...how will you handle it? Will you freak out and decide that rotten tooth = rotten you, or will you cup it in your hands, thank the forces that be for this unexpected present, and squeeze from it all the goodness it can possibly yield?

From here on out, I will try to remember to take option #2, thank you very much.



Yours, the responsible and newly-dentist-ed,
YogaLia