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finding balance regarding dental care
I clicked on "new topic" and thought about how asking about caring for kids' teeth isn't a new topic. ? |
Hi Lisa,? It's interesting how you can get differing advice on the same matter from different dentists.? My son (7) had an abscess recently and had to have the tooth pulled.? The dentist saw cavities between every tooth.? This was the second issue he has had, so not as extensive as your son's, but still similar.? This dentist told us that this is really genetic.? If your kid has had a few cavities, he's always going to be dealing with this.? The more you can do, the better.? She said, "whatever you are doing now, try to do more.? Way more would be best."??? So we were brushing every night, and now we floss before we brush every night.? This particular son has no resistance to brushing or flossing, so this is easy for us luckily.? I buy bags of flossers that are easy for my son to use while he is playing video games and I pass them out to all my sons at night while they are on their computers.? They floss now every night between rounds of whatever games they are playing. ? In the recovery phase, we bought a water pick and he used that with warm salt water to clean around the hole.? I know that brushing in the morning also would be a good idea, but I can't seem to remember to do it.? Sometimes when he is eating a lot of sticky food, I will point out that it might stick to his teeth so would he like to brush them afterwards to keep his teeth clean.? Our dentist never mentioned eating candy or not eating candy.? She did mention xylitol and said the jury is out on that one, but flossing definitely helps.?? After our experience, I didn't even think about avoiding candy as it never came up at all!? It seems that you have an immediate issue of how to handle the healing process and not wanting to do any suction-type of chewing with gummies in the short term although your son is asking to do it anyway.? It's not about restricting sugar, but about restricting suction on the caps.? Does your son understand that it is a short-term restriction, only to allow the mouth to stabilize and then he will be able to return to his favorite candies?? Or did I misunderstand that part of what is going on??? ~Ali On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 4:24 PM, lisajceledon@... [AlwaysLearning] <AlwaysLearning@...> wrote:
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***My inclination is to wait a bit while his mouth heals some more***
Yes, I think so. ?Maybe looking at the situation from a different perspective will inspire greater clarity so you have more confidence moving forward. ? If your son loved baseball and broke his arm playing, how would you support him? ?You'd likely tell him he can't play again until it heals. ?He'd probably be disappointed that he couldn't play, maybe angry, maybe sad, but hopefully you'd find other ways to help him enjoy the game while he recovered. Being clear helps. ?"You can't play the game right now. ?You have a broken arm and it needs time to heal." ?Same is true with his mouth, I think. ?It sounds like his mouth needs time to heal, so there are certain foods he should steer clear of. ?I would suspect hard foods and sticky foods might be problematic, but you would know better than me.? Don't focus on the candy. ?Focus on what might help or hinder his recovery. ?Let him know can revisit the foods he loves after he's had time to heal. ?For now, have fun finding alternatives. ?Gently ease away from what's not an option, and move toward what is. ?You both might discover foods you never would have explored otherwise. ? Karen James ? ? |
I let the long post through from Caryn Stockwell bikerchick even though some of it isn¡¯t great unschooling advice.
Dental treament is likely screwy. Everyone who is in business is in business to make money. So politicizing it and demonizing dentists isn¡¯t going to help a single human anywhere in the world. But because dental theories do change, I don¡¯t mind some other ideas being out there. Please, anyone, everyone, don¡¯t believe anything you¡¯ve only read once, especially in a forum like this, or on facebook. In all my life I¡¯ve never seen as big a flood of falsehood and nonsense as I¡¯ve seen in 2016 so far. The second worst was 2015. Next year should be worse. BE CAREFUL what you get excited about or fearful of. Be thoughtful. Read a little. Try a little. Wait a while. Watch. Not just about unschooling. -=- Current dental practices actually end up destroying the remaining tooth and underlying bone structures, creating further damage to the human body and causing an eventual loss of all teeth-=- This is incorrect, as to eventual loss of all teeth. For people born in the 1920s (in the U.S.) LOTS and lots lost so many teeth that dentists pulled the remaining teeth and created full dentures. VERY few people born in the 1950¡¯s and 60¡¯s have full dentures, compared to their parents and grandparents. For millenials, it¡¯s plainly too soon to know. Beliefs WILL change again, and then change again. So don¡¯t be duped by any extremists, and don¡¯t believe everything you read. -=-The majority of dentists are not working to heal teeth or educate the public on oral care, they are in business to make money.-=- Quite damning of people who learned a trade and got a job and have families to support. ¡°In business to make money¡± seems so cold and evil, there. -=-Use toothbrushes with soft bristles made from activated charcoal, bamboo bristles (available on Amazon) ... these are much gentler on teeth and will not erode the enamel from the tooth surfaces like conventional bristles will. If you must use toothpaste, switch to one that is 100% natural with ingredients that are beneficial to the human body ... Twin Lotus makes a good one with activated charcoal (also on Amazon). -=- Those are not ¡°in business to make money¡±? Is Twin Lotus not a corporation? If they discover that their product isn¡¯t as great as they¡¯re advertising, will they send money back all over the world and apologize, or won¡¯t they dodge and weave to defend the company from loss? My strongly held belief about most things is that no one know for sure, knowledge grows and changes, but that stress and fear are always harmful. People live when they live. If they need medical treatment, when and where they live will determine what might be happening to them. Nobody lives in the future. I doubt there will be a future in which humans know everything perfectly. So far that hasn¡¯t happened, and what¡¯s recommended in one country isn¡¯t the same as across an imaginary line. So ANY freak-out or self-righteous fright will hurt more than help. Avoid buying into other people¡¯s fright or assuredness or sales pitches. Check other sources, calmly, Know that it will all change by the time your children are grown. Sandra |
I can't offer advice on dental care. What I -do- have experience with is having favorite foods suddenly off limits. It's HARD. And it's harder, even as an adult, when someone says "That's just how it is. Deal with it." Which is what it sounds like the dentists are doing.
As an eleven-year-old I developed ulcers and was on a highly restrictive bland diet. It was miserable. I remember sobbing while watching Burger King commercials. Last year, I was put on blood thinners and had to give up cranberries and severely limit my green veggies. I'd never realized how many cranberries and brussel sprouts were in my Pinterest feed every day until they were suddenly the forbidden fruit.? Now I'm on a different blood thinner and the only thing off limits is grapefruit. I probably haven't eaten grapefruit in twenty years and don't even? like the stuff, but they told me I can never eat one again and it suddenly sounds awful tempting. (Knowing that it would keep my body from metabolizing the blood thinners is enough to make me follow the rules, but if it was a less serious risk than that, I probably would cheat a bit.) I wouldn't tell your son that he can never have gummies again, because it seems like that's just too cruel a blow, especially piled on top of all of the dental surgery and everything else. It's not the same thing at all, but part of my ongoing adventure with blood thinners is that I no longer get to take Advil (or anything else non narcotic that works)? I can get away with one or two doses a month, so I carry them in my purse for when I really need them and keep saving them for later. I don't know if something like that -- the idea that they're still an option now and then -- would work with gummies. Or maybe not until his mouth heals more. I've only got one crown and I'm not totally clear on how they work. Are there other foods your son loves that aren't off limits according to the dentists?? Maybe something he hasn't thought about because he's so focused on what he suddenly can't have? Or something that isn't food that would be a nice distraction? Can you make it easier on him by keeping him away from the checkout line with the grocery store, or other places where the gummy candies are hanging there all sparkly and tempting? Michelle |
<<I think I'm feeling fuzzy about how important it really is-- how to balance between control and neglect. ?I think I still have some distortion or lack of clarity there.>>
Ethan and I visited a new dentist in our area after we moved last year. ?When we walked out of the office, they had proposed around $7500 dollars worth of work that "needed" to be done on my mouth asap (or my teeth might fall out, they said), and $1500 worth of work that they suggested needed to be done for Ethan. ?Since we'd both had regular 6 month check-ups for years without any major issues, I was left wondering how necessary our work really was. ?So, I said "No thanks" for now. ?I wanted another opinion. ?When we were due for another cleaning, I booked our appointments at a different dentist. ?Turns out neither of us had any issues that needed to be addressed. ?The hygienist actually called my mouth "boring!" ?Sometimes a second or third opinion helps bring a bit of clarity. ?It can show inconsistencies, and it can help define issues that might really need more attention. ? ? One thing I have noticed with children who have had issues with their baby teeth is that their adult teeth seem to be more resilient. ?I've had quiet a few friends whose young ones had problems with decay in their baby teeth. ?Many of them are Ethan's age or older now, and they all have fine adult teeth. ?I don't know what causes some baby teeth to decay and others not to. ?I suspect luck of the (gene) draw. ?I haven't noticed any pattern among my friends, though that's a very small sampling of people. ?They had varied diets and habits. ?Perhaps realizing it will likely not be a forever issue might ease some of your own anxiety. ? ? Karen James? |
Ethan and I visited a new dentist in our area after we movedI've had a couple of similar experiences over the years, always with a new-to-us dentist. Twice (twenty years apart with different dental problems) I believe that they were scams. One told me I needed a dozen fillings and proposed financing and a payment plan. I went to a different dentist expecting to need all of those fillings and asked him to prioritize which were most urgent. It turned out that I only needed three. We've also had a family dentist who was extremely aggressive about jumping in and fixing even the most minor problems immediately. I never had reason to question his honesty or ethics, but he was very expensive. Michelle |
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýKaren is right, his baby teeth are no indicative of how his adult teeth will be. Diets and much more are no indication of the health of your teeth. I have friends whose kids barely brushes their teeth, eat lots of sweets and have absolutely no cavities. Just like their mom they have very strong teeth. Genetics play a big part too. Alex P. On Jun 4, 2016, at 5:09 PM, semajrak@... [AlwaysLearning] <AlwaysLearning@...> wrote:
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¿ªÔÆÌåÓýI've had similar experiences to Karen, and my son is one of those kids that Alex mentioned.
From: AlwaysLearning@... on behalf of semajrak@... [AlwaysLearning]
Sent: 04 June 2016 23:09 To: AlwaysLearning@... Subject: [AlwaysLearning] Re: finding balance regarding dental care ?
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One thing I have noticed with children who have had issues with their baby teeth is that their adult teeth seem to be more resilient. ?I've had quiet a few friends whose young ones had problems with decay in their baby
teeth. ?Many of them are Ethan's age or older now, and they all have fine adult teeth. ?I don't know what causes some baby teeth to decay and others not to. ?I suspect luck of the (gene) draw. ?I haven't noticed any pattern among my friends, though that's
a very small sampling of people. ?They had varied diets and habits. ?Perhaps realizing it will likely not be a forever issue might ease some of your own anxiety. ? ?
Karen James?
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¿ªÔÆÌåÓýHow about making a fun game of trying to find and taste as many new (non-sticky) candies as possible to help him still feel abundance while his mouth heals. You could search local stores, try an Asian market, look on Amazon and go on a tasting adventure.? We got a cotton candy maker at our thrift store and have had so much fun with that over the years. You can put any kind of hard candy in there and spin it into cotton candy. Maybe you could even put sticky candy in there. I think gummy bears might make a mess but maybe the harder ones like Now & Laters could be spun into cotton candy.? After his mouth heals a bit, he could start slowly adding some of his favorites back in and see how it feels. Something like a gummy bear is relatively soft compared to something like caramel so he can try to make thoughtful choices about what feels gentlest on his teeth.? I have a couple of crowns that I've had for years and I do sometimes eat chewy things and have never had a problem. But sometimes I'll be chomping on something and remember the crowns and decide to have just a little.? I also have this stuff I got at the grocery store for if I ever were to pop off a crown. It is a temporary filler that I could put in there so that the inside would not be exposed, while waiting for the crown to be replaced.? And, like you said, they are baby teeth so it's not forever.? -CASS |
there are some really great, calming posts on this topic. I wanted to add a few thoughts.?
genetics are not very clearly understood. epigenetics (how our environment affects our genes) is real and powerful, also not yet well understood. what goes into our bodies matters to health, and teeth are part of the body, and also how we feel about what goes into our bodies matters, maybe even more. constantly being afraid of doing harm and not eating things we fear (but love) is probably worse than happily doing what someone else thinks is "harmful". ? I love the perspective that if he had a broken arm he couldn't play sports. great analogy! not "you can't have gummies ever" but "it's better to wait for now." I also love the idea to explore new foods. I recently discovered several food allergies and intolerances in myself that had been causing chronic inflammation in my body. in choosing to remove those things, I've discovered some amazingly tasty and creative alternatives I never would have found had I not been squeezed in that direction. but it's important for me to frame it as a choice. just last night my husband was asking about a food I can't eat and I said I can eat it and here's what would happen - if that seems worth it, I'll eat it. otherwise I choose not to.? Mouth health is directly affected by gut health. can you find some probiotic candies? I know there are probiotic gummies for when his teeth heal a bit. milkshakes with yogurt added? prebiotics (foods that feed good bacteria) are great, too, like fruits and beans. I've made some surprisingly delicious and gooey cookies and brownies with bean flours, no grains at all. even fooled my refined-flour-loving husband. see this as an opportunity to explore! I'm an avid health and nutrition researcher. there is an astounding amount of conflicting information. when in doubt, do what makes the most happiness. there is no doubt that happiness is good for you.? cheri |
For me, it's about priorities. It's not that I don't find there to be strong evidence for certain dietary practices, it's that I have to decide what is the best means of strengthening my relationship with my son, and strengthening his relationship with himself. If I accept as fact that certain foods are toxic and damaging, I'm putting a lot of energy into fear about things that might never happen, and creating strife and conflict in my home. If, instead, I focus on the immediate need, then I'm much calmer and more authentic. So, the immediate need is that there is a healing process that has to happen, and it's your job to facilitate that. Gummies are going to obstruct that healing process. So, how to focus on enabling the healing process in a positive way, rather than the obstruction bogeyman? My kids are happy to have candy-my younger adores it and he *has* had problems with his teeth. But there are lots of foods they like better, that are special, that they will happily eat instead. All of them are more expensive and typically more effort on my part-embrace that! They love mangoes, grapes, cucumbers, home-made ice cream in cones, sorbet, cupcakes; keep it fun. Find fun sweets that aren't sticky and be the mom that doesn't shame your kids for loving sweets! Would it be better for kids' teeth if we still lived in caves and ate primal diets? Since we don't, it's pretty irrelevant. It might matter to me, as an adult, and I can make my own decisions about food. But I have to let my kids get to their happy place their way. Sarah |
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýLike Sandra said , don't believe everything you read not even here. Here is an article about the book just mentioned and curing decay with diet: Alex Polikowsky. On Jun 4, 2016, at 10:42 AM, Ali Zeljo azeljo@... [AlwaysLearning] <AlwaysLearning@...> wrote:
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-=-Would it be better for kids' teeth if we still lived in caves and ate primal diets? Since we don't, it's pretty irrelevant.-=-
Yes. Good question. Would the promise of stronger teeth in those who lived to adulthood be worth the risks of children falling into open firepits or being eaten by wolves and tigers? How much time should be spent analyzing that? :-) I guess I¡¯m done for life, now. :-) People pine for living in other places and other times. It¡¯s probably as natural as anything else about people! People¡¯s innate satisfaction with the way things are is what causes them to invent, improve, and explore. Sandra |
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýI wanted to share a bit about our experiences with dental health and food control.
When my kids were really little I did my best to ensure that any teeth they had were brushed once a day. ?We were not on any special kind of diet, we ate what felt right or what was easiest.? My daughter developed asthma when she was 2 and it was scary to me so I started researching all kinds of ways to try to help her. ?I came across lots of alternative information that promised to help and eventually I decided to try to provide "clean air, clean food and clean water" and theorized that if I could do that her body should heal and the asthma go away. ?"Clean food" meant food made from scratch with raw dairy, sprouted grains, special sugars, grass fed meat, supplements such as probiotics and x-factor butter combined with fermented cod liver oil. ?No food coloring, artificial sweetners... you get the idea. ?Providing this diet meant conflict with my kids, mainly my daughter who craved candy and packaged foods, but I felt like I wanted to really give it my best shot and see if it helped. During all of this time my kids saw the dentist from time to time and had some cavities but never anything upsetting or worrisome. ?My husband and I both have a lot of fillings and my baby teeth were terrible so we expected our kids to have similar problems. ?I did not notice any difference in their oral health pre-special diet vs. post-special diet. Four years ago we started unschooling and I stopped enforcing dietary restrictions. ?Predictably, my daughter, who had felt so deprived, went directly to all of the previously forbidden foods and rejected those that had been pushed on her before. ?She ate a diet that consisted of primarily sweets and packaged foods for about two years. ?I also stopped forcing them to brush their teeth. ?I encouraged it and did try to support it but if their was resistance I would not push. ?I decided that while we were deschooling I would let go of worrying about their teeth. We did not go to the dentist during that time because I did not want to add conflict to my thinking during a transitional time and I was sure their teeth must be suffering for all of the extra sweets and lack of brushing. ?After two years the kids said they missed going to the dentist and asked if we could go. ?I made appointments for them and braced myself. ?To my delighted surprise - neither kid had a single cavity! ?In fact, the dentist described my son's teeth as "beautiful". To this day, neither of them has had a cavity since! ? That's right, we added all those boogey-man foods into our diets, brushed only sporadically and our dental health improved! ?I can't say why that is. ?We also moved about 6 months prior to beginning our unschooling journey and we now live on a property with delicious, mountain well water. ?I suspect that there may be something about the dissolved minerals in our water that is protecting our teeth because our teeth are so good now and we don't do anything special. ?Of course, I have no way of knowing for sure if it is the water and it is irrelevant to most people, but it is a variable that changed for us, which is why I'm mentioning it. ?My husband and I have not had any dental issues since moving here but we haven't been for a check up recently either so it's hard to say definitively - but we do feel like our teeth have gotten better since moving here as both of us usually have new cavities pretty regularly. ?Also, the kids have gone from baby teeth to adult teeth over these past few years, another variable, but they have not carried on their parent's tendency to have cavities in those adult teeth. ? I have noticed time and again that both kids will tend to neglect brushing and flossing for awhile and after a time their gums start to feel itchy and a little swollen so they decide to brush and floss more regularly until that feeling goes away. ? My daughter has braces and every time she goes in to have her wire changed the orthodontist praises her for taking such good care of her teeth. He thinks she is super diligent about it but in reality, she will usually say to me something like "I haven't brushed my teeth in 2 weeks and my teeth feel kind of itchy. ?My orthodontist appointment is in a week so I'm going to brush and floss twice a day until then." ?Then we go in and he praises her because her teeth look so great! I do think that flossing and brushing help, that has been our experience, but beyond that there seems to be much more guessing and conjecture than actual knowledge. ?My personal experiences have led me to believe that restrictive diets or militant oral care are not the answer. And it seems to be more than simple genetics. I have also noticed that recently my daughter, who is now 13, has had a big decrease in her cravings for sugary and highly processed foods. ?She is feeling repulsed by many of the foods she has eaten routinely for the past few years and now is requesting "things with meat, but not prepackaged, made from scratch". Like lasagna but not lasagna made elsewhere and sold in the frozen foods section, only lasagne that I make. ?Her nutritional needs seem to be changing, prompting different cravings and I try to respect that. ? -Cass .
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--- did not notice any difference in their oral health pre-special diet vs. post-special diet. ---
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We started the very restrictive diet when she was about 6 until age 10. On Jun 5, 2016, at 1:33 PM, Cass Kotrba caskot@... [AlwaysLearning] <AlwaysLearning@...> wrote: |
---Avoid buying into other people¡¯s fright or assuredness or sales pitches.?
Check other sources, calmly, Know that it will all change by the time your children are grown.--- After I wrote the original post, I felt better for the remainder of the day. I think relaxing a bit allowed some clarity to surface, and I started feeling angry, and after Josh fell asleep next to me I felt really terrible. I think my confusion and anxiety had a lot to do with the way I made a fear-based decision for my son's care. ?He went to the dentist because I saw he had an abscess on his gums. ?With my younger son, who has more obvious decay, I have watched him for signs of abscess and haven't seen it, and have felt comfortable not following the recommendations of the dentists he's seen. Neither child has complained of pain hardly at all, and even with an abscess, Josh said it didn't hurt. But I took him, because with an infection I felt less secure in my own knowledge of how potentially serious it might be. The information I found online all suggested that it was potentially very serious, even life-threatening. ?I knew the risk of that was very very unlikely, especially since he had no pain, no inflammation, and wasn't even running much of a fever, but I was afraid to assume it would be fine. ?I also didn't realize that I would not have the option to only treat the one tooth that had an abscess. ? There were a number of things that set off little alarms in my head, there was a lot of effort made toward separating the parents from the kids (I was given a contract to sign that said I would leave the room when the dentist told me to. I didn't sign it, though I did step outside the door when she asked me to leave, and told Josh I was right there and could hear him if he needed me). ?There were posters hanging that were designed to shame parents for feeding their children anything sweet. ?There was information that shamed parents for letting their kids have juice, even, or bottles or breastmilk. ?There was a poster that said "Cavities are 100% preventable!" in english and spanish, which isn't even close to true, based on pretty widely available scientific information on how and why cavities form. The dental assistant didn't believe Josh (even rolled her eyes at him and said, "it's just in your head.") that he was gagging on the bite wing for the x-ray, even though he articulated very clearly that he *wanted* to hold it in his mouth but his throat kept pushing it back out. I had asked the nurse if she wanted my help, that he might have an easier time doing it with me there. She finally said yes and he was able to do it that time. But afterward I saw her write in big letters on her clipboard "UNCOOPERATIVE." ?('How unfair! she was the uncooperative one!!' Screamed in my head when I saw that) When the dentist came in, he was a little hesitant, a little afraid, but he did let her look and did exactly what she asked really well! He was friendly and chatty with her and they seemed to get along. ?She also wrote down "UNCOOPERATIVE" on her clipboard! ? Even though I intellectually thought this was all suspect, it did effect me on an emotional level in a way I didn't really notice, or know how to anticipate, until the dentist was talking to me about how Josh had a really deep, serious infection that needed immediate treatment in at least two teeth, and that his entire mouth was in really bad shape. ?I asked her what the options were, as far as treating the most urgent problems first, and she said, No. he had an active infection, his decay was too wide spread and too serious to even begin considering things like that. He needed immediate treatment, and it had to be done under general anesthesia. Once he was under, they would see what needed to be done and do all of it, they could not and would not do partial work. ?If these problems had been treated earlier on before they got serious, there might have been more room for options, but she wouldn't put her own children through all the work he needed without anesthesia because it would be cruel. And the basic, deep, primal feeling I had by the end of her speech was one of dismay, that I had been a bad girl, and worse, that I was being negligent and in danger of losing something precious, and I'd better fix it or else. ?And now I can see how that altered my response. Instead of being thoughtful and thanking her for the information, and following the wisdom I felt about it, which was that it wasn't nearly as urgent as she made it sound, and that I had time to research and ask around and figure out options before making a choice, I became as compliant as she wanted me to be. I became the good girl who was doing the right thing in their eyes. ? I'm writing all that out in case it can help anyone else. It helps me too, to put it out there in words. Thinking back, I've had reactions like this since his conception. It's been different than with my second son- I've felt far more confident and calm about being his capable mother, since his birth (which was a much more positive and empowering experience). In our particular case, in the county we live in, the local social climate, the fact that we have medi-cal and the way medi-cal works in our county, the fact that the kids are not in school, and we have chosen not to do regular medical or dental check-ups for years, ultimately, it was not a terribly insensible thing to follow the dentist's recommendation, especially at that time with the knowledge I had. ?It helps me a bit to feel good about how perceptive I can be about those things. ?But I know the difference between making an intentional choice, and making one out of fear, and this one I made out of fear. ? Marta was kind enough to forward me the list she compiled of dental care suggestions, along with some discussion about anxiety she generated along very similar lines. And I was so struck at the difference in response between her dentist and the one we saw! It was what helped me see through the fuzziness I'd been feeling, and recognize the way I'd been influenced to do something against my better judgement, and the self doubt and second guessing that followed. ?I'm glad I have more clarity around what I was feeling. ? (More embarrassing was that I had also responded on that thread, with the confidence and clarity I've had around my younger son's dental care) There was more I realized that made me angry, the night after I sent that original post. But I don't think it would help (me or anyone else) to write it all out here. ?I'm glad I wasn't afraid to be angry. ?I used to try to soften everything, and excuse things that made me angry, try to see the positive side, but not in as mindful or sensible a way. ?This anger has helped me notice more deeply, pay better attention to what I saw and felt and experienced, fearlessly evaluate the impact on Josh, and to think better about my future options. After scheduling Josh's surgery, fearfully, I went ahead and scheduled Kaiden's too, feeling suddenly like I maybe shouldn't trust my judgement with his mouth either-- or even if I did trust it, I'd better not let them think I trusted myself more than them, that compliance was safer. ?Luckily his surgery is scheduled further out, and I have time to consider and cancel if that would be better. I am feeling much less afraid, and more clear and competent than I was two days ago. I still don't know exactly what the right choice is, but I don't feel afraid about that, or that I need an answer right now, or that I'm bouncing back in reaction to how I feel about my experience with Josh. I didn't understand how all of this would unfold when I got scared, seeing an abscess in his mouth, and took him to the dentist. I understand better now, and being angry about it helped me see that I wasn't okay with complying that way, out of fear, and not out of a well-considered intention to do the most sensible thing for my kids. I do feel ready to move forward, and don't feel like I need to hold on to the anger or for it to be able to guide me better in the future. Yesterday we picked up some kites to take with us to visit my in-laws, and Josh wanted to get some gummy candy too. ?I went to look at the display and saw they had a softer sort of gummy that he's liked before, and suggested those, because they were less likely to hurt when he chewed, and he was happy with that. The discharge nurse had told me that he could eat whatever consistency food he was comfortable tolerating, and that I could follow his lead on giving him foods that required more chewing. So when we got back to the car, I handed him the gummies and said it would be good to try chewing one very carefully first and see how that felt. ?Turned out to be fine and he had no pain. ?He's still avoiding crackers and cheerios (he loves cheerios), and anything crunchy, but is doing okay. ?Sweet foods really seem to help the pain a lot. ?He was holding his jaw the other day and started getting really upset telling me it hurt and he was frustrated that he couldn't eat his lunch (it was all soft stuff, really soft, cooled steamed cauliflower and really ripe little pieces of plum and hardboiled egg), then he asked for a popsicle instead (he didn't want the tylenol) and within 15 minutes of finishing it was in a much better mood and ate more off his plate and got up and started playing and being his normal, silly, playful self.? Again, writing all this out because it helps me, and I hope it can be helpful to other people too. Lisa Celedon ? |
-=-I do think that flossing and brushing help, that has been our experience, but beyond that there seems to be much more guessing and conjecture than actual knowledge. My personal experiences have led me to believe that restrictive diets or militant oral care are not the answer. And it seems to be more than simple genetics.-=-
I was a great student in school. Really studious and quick and I always remembered procedures. I would say just in elementary and Jr. High, but really it was between 4th grade and 9th, so over six years, the absolute one right way to brush teeth was changed two times, so that¡¯s three different versions of the ¡°right way¡± to brush. One was up and down on the outsides, and back and forth on the flats of molars. Next, back and forth, gently, soft bristles¡ªnot down on the gumline because it would trap food. Third way was down on the top teeth, up on the bottom teeth, always away from the gums. Then floss and picks came along later, and it was ¡°get below the gum line.¡± But I don¡¯t remember when that was, and it didn¡¯t come out of a school health book. And that was in ONE school district. What about kids who moved from state to state or country to country!? Also, a story I¡¯ve told other places, in my lifetime the part of a hamburger that was the very best part (healthiest) has gone through all of them. And each part (lettuce, tomato, beef, cheese, bread) has been considered bad for one reason or another. Same-same with pizza. Turns out the thing to do is just eat the parts you like and not agonize. Sandra |
-=-Again, writing all this out because it helps me, and I hope it can be helpful to other people too.-=-
Thanks, Lisa, for sharing all those details. Maybe, for the other child¡¯s surgery, you could take their recommendations in writing (or the contract, or whatever you might have in wriing) and go to another dentist for a second opinion. I had some dental surgery I probably didn¡¯t need one time, and felt tricked and shamed. Probably everyone here could tell a story of having felt disregarded by some medical assistant, nurse, dentist, doctor, or standing by while their child was. It¡¯s frustrating during and afterwards, but those things can give us a starting place for future encounters. It¡¯s easy to get flustered when there¡¯s fear in the mix. Sandra |
A post from yesterday (that some people were referencing, that I responded to) was removed by its author.
I¡¯ve saved it, without her name, here, with my response and what she sent me on the side. At the very bottom is a note from me just for that page, with some links. It¡¯s not important enough to go to. It was kind of getting off topic. :-) Sandra |