English 版 (精华区)
发信人: rainy (段誉), 信区: English
标 题: Thanksgiving and Root Canals
发信站: 紫 丁 香 (Mon Dec 6 19:46:48 1999), 转信
Nothing like a good old fashioned root canal makes me
appreciate life and all I have, especially at Thanksgiving!
Five months ago I sat beneath the nervous hands of my
regular dentist as she drilled three holes in my head, all
the while reassuring me that everything would be okay if I
just stopped jerking and twitching, whining and groaning. I
wanted to explain that my movements and the noise making
were involuntary. But it's kind of hard to say that or
anything else with an I-beam support system installed in
your mouth. She couldn't have heard me over the scream of
her high speed drill anyway.
I was so relieved after it was all over that I almost threw
up. After allowing time to compose myself, the dentist
mentioned that there might be a fourth very, very tiny root,
but she couldn't be sure because she hadn't detected one
(was it because my mouth was so mangled from doing the first
three?). She wanted me to see another tooth pounder who
specializes in digging out fourth roots. At that point I did
throw up.
A few days later I found myself in the chair of a Fourth
Root Specialist. Indeed, he reported, there was a fourth
root, very very small, but there. And so we did it all
again...
During the next four months I spent a lot of time
appreciating having survived these two ordeals. Life was
great! But sometime during the fifth month a dull, familiar
pain began reminding me of my earlier trauma.
I tried ignoring it, but it didn't go away. Then I tried
reasoning with myself. "I probably just need to brush better
and floss more. That'll take care of it!" Nope. Outright
denial and pain management were next. "It can't be that
tooth. That tooth is dead. That's what I paid for. This must
be something else. Minor." And so it went, until late one
evening while enroute to Florida for a quick getaway with my
family.
Why things like this happen during times that are supposed
to be fun really bewilders me. We needed the short vacation
we were taking. But my tooth needed relief, and it chose
that particular evening to finally steer me to the emergency
room of a small town hospital. Thank God for small towns
with near empty emergency rooms! I was treated quickly for
the horrendous pain, started on antibiotics, and admonished
to see a dentist as soon as I returned from our trip.
Several days later, in less pain but more nervous than a
three legged cat in a pit bull cage, I found myself in the
exquisitely furnished consultation office (late 18th Century
I think) of an oral surgeon. It appears that he specializes
in cleaning up the messes made by regular dentists and
Fourth Root Specialists.
He confirmed that the abscess was back, hiding at the bottom
of two of my now dead four roots. What this meant to me was
that it's hiding somewhere between my left earlobe and left
eye socket. It occurred to me that it might be less painful
and a lot more efficient if he just sliced my face open to
fix this thing. I admit this was the point at which fear
began overtaking me.
As I considered bolting for the door, he intercepted my
thoughts by assuring me I wouldn't even notice the procedure
he was performing since I would be under a general
anesthesia. It was about that time I noticed the
certificates on his wall.
This guy, who appears to be perhaps thirty-five, is degreed
in basic dentistry, general oral surgeonism, jaw surgery,
cosmetic reconstructive surgery, general medicine,
anesthesiology, and engineering! A real one man show! I
figured he must've spent at least fifteen years in post
graduate schools. Was I gonna be his first patient?
Well, I figured the only way out was to suggest simply
pulling the tooth (he could probably build a great bridge to
replace it considering his engineering degree and all). He
said that was possible, but that I would probably be happier
trying to save the tooth. I countered that happiness has to
include money to feed yourself and, with his fee quotation,
I would starve and therefore not be able to benefit from
using the saved tooth.
So he cut the price in half. Just like that! Did I miss a
degree in Sales? Maybe that one's hanging in his business
office. Out of excuses, I was able to get a temporary
reprieve until the antibiotics finish doing their job.
I finished the antibiotics a few days ago, and most of the
pain is gone. I feel so much better! Life is good again!
Hey! Maybe the abscess is gone for good. Maybe I won't have
to go under the drill (or was it a scalpel?) of this dental
engineering surgeon after all! All I know for sure is that
feeling good is the first thing I'm grateful for this
Thanksgiving week!
If there's a moral to this story, I suppose it goes
something like this:
Very few events in life really get our undivided attention
and energy the way a root canal does. So if your current
pain doesn't scale right up there with root canal therapy,
it's just a minor annoyance.
Ignore your annoyances and live life as though you were
racing against your next root canal!
--
是大树,就要顶起一屋大梁 天下英雄出我辈 是森林,就要撑起一片蓝天
一入江湖岁月催
王图霸业谈笑间
不胜人生一场醉
※ 修改:.rainy 于 Dec 6 19:48:07 修改本文.[FROM: 202.118.239.189]
※ 来源:.紫 丁 香 bbs.hit.edu.cn.[FROM: 202.118.239.189]
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