Friday, March 31, 2006

Mouth Drama

If I believed in past lives, I would really think that I must have been something horrible. Perhaps I was a vampire. A cannibalistic serial killer. A rattlesnake with a vendetta. All of this bad karma has come back to bite me, quite physically, in the mouth.

In the fourth grade, my dentist dropped a bomb on me: I need braces. For an awkward nine year old in a small school where NO ONE ELSE wears these contraptions, this is truly the end of the world. I begged. I pleaded. I cajolled. I bargained. I still ended up with braces. Being as I was little, I had absolutely no say in the matter. What I remember most about this experience, is this fabulous (read: oh my god what is that?!) little device which my orthodontist lovingly called a "tick-tick." This cute sounding mechanism was meant to take those rounded back brackets that enclose the molar and, like a jackhammer, pound them into the subject's jaw. It is called a "tick-tick" because during these moments of excrutiating pain, there's this unpleasant ticking sound as a reminder of just what is going on in there. This happened eight times. It happened eight more time about halfway into the treatment because they had shaken loose, since the doctor didn't think to put any glue under them the first time. Or the second, for that matter. The happiest day of my life was when these were removed, and I was instead given this hockey-puck mouth guard to chew on, and later a removable retainer.

When I was thirteen, I went to a camp for two weeks. I stupidly left my retainer at home, but was assured that two weeks without it wouldn't hurt. I returned to find that the dog had gotten it out of its case and managed to break both pieces in half. As it was apparently unacceptable to simply glue them back together (for reasons I still don't understand), I gave it to my parents, told them what happened, and asked when I should get a new one. For the life of me, I don't remember what they answered, but somehow I never got a new one. Cue several years of my dentist harping on ME because of this. I'm thirteen, what am I supposed to do about it?

These years of torment from the dentist and harping of my parents by me yield no results. My teeth revert back to genetics, but this time there's a twist: the gums are receding! I need braces to push them back in line to keep them from falling out, no longer just for cosmetic reasons. Most of you know that I have since received braces, and that my teeth hurt me monthly for about a week at a time. You also know that I had a moment of glory when I found that use of the tick-tick device has been almost universally stopped.

The panic came when the orthodontist told me that braces probably wont save the two precarious teeth. I need a skin graft, or extraction. Not all that keen on losing more teeth (I had about four pulled in the third grade; did I leave that out? It was surprisingly uneventful, as was the removal of my wisdom teeth, sans of course discovering I'm allergic to codeine when it made me vomit twice and I had to clean out my incisions. But I digress), I decided that skin graft was the way to go. There is a previous post concerning this, and I will leave it to your discretion whether or not you want to read it. It's a little disgusting. Suffice to say that it was painful, scary, and horrible, and I spent a whole month post-op worrying that it was going to fall off. I'm better now; I'm even okay with flossing and brushing normally. Finally.

Sometime in November, before the gum graft and immediately following the placement of braces, a little bubbled formed on my top gums near one of my incisors. It looks like a pimple. Can a person get a pimple on her gums? I asked the orthodontist, who had never seen anything like that "in his twenty five years of dentistry." I was a little freaked out. He referred me to an endodontist, whom I saw yesterday. Now, I'm a lot freaked out.

He took an x-ray of the area and showed it to me. A verbal artists rendering goes like this:
tooth, root, bone. tooth, root, bone. tooth, root, GIANT BLACK SPACE, little bit of bone. Tooth, root, bone. This giant black space is an infection. Apparently, at some point in the past, I was hit in the face, jarring the tooth and killing the root. Somehow, the dead root got infected. Since the root is dead, bloodflow to the area for infection removal is impossible, so it festered (that's right, I used the word fester!). So, here's what happens now: more gum surgery.

It goes like this:
1. Local anesthetic, and an incision along the gum line at the problem tooth.
2. The man removes the infected tissue
3. He places a little enforcer in there so the tooth doesn't dislodge.
4. They close it up and send me home in massive amounts of pain.
This costs me a lot.

Another scenario is this:
Repeat steps one and two.
3. He notices that there isn't enough bone to promote good healing.
4. He does a BONE GRAFT, or uses artificial bone to bulk up the area.
5. He places a little enforcer so the tooth doesn't dislodge.
6. They close it up and send me home in larger amounts of pain.
This costs me a lot more.

Another scenario is the same as the above, but replace "bone" with "tissue." Repeat price.

Still another is the scenarios above COMBINED. This costs... a lot more than a lot more.

The final scenario is that all of these are impossible and the tooth has to come out and I need an implant. That's right: implant. Lucky for me, my dad works in implants. I'd save some money cuz he'd likely give it to the guy for free (provided he even uses the type and knows how to do it himself).

I don't know what I did. The other areas of my life are fine. In fact, I'm frequently referred to as "cosmically blessed" or "that girl with a horseshoe up her butt." All of my bad karma is taken out on my mouth. Or in my mouth, whichever is more appropriate. So tell me your karma problems. I'll send you good X-karma if you'll send me good mouth karma. Good karma makes the world go round. Let's help it go a little nicer.

Monday, March 27, 2006

Man....

Thus far, I have ripped out and restarted my "scarf" four times. As soon as I started it up again, I tore it out. I couldn't deal with it. I didn't like the pattern. I didn't like the mistakes. I couldn't handle the inconsitencies. I thought to myself, "I'm a better knitter than that. What will people think when they see this?" and got to ripping. On this, the fourth restart, I feel better. The pattern is right. The tension is pretty good. The width is better. I still love the colour. It is, however, still on the backburner for the blanket. I have one and a half balls to go. I may have to purchase a seventh ball, but I'm going to wait until I've nearly finished number six before making that decision.

Today, I'm listening to my new neighbour's bad music through the floor (must...sound...proof...), contemplating suicide over it, just finished eating faux boeuf stroganoff and drinking a vegan protein shake. I recently got over a horrible stomach virus and have only in the last few days been able to have real good solid food. I also just as recently had my braces tightened and only in the last day or so been able to chew said real good solid food. This shake, however, is a blend of pureed hemp seeds (which turned into a paste), banana (which contributed a horrible greeny colour and frothy sheen to the paste), frozen strawberries and raspberries (to make it pink and therefore more palatable), and leftover orangina to make it less sorbet-like and more liquid-like. I'm pretty happy with the resulting flava. It almost makes the hip-hop bearable.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

I am Remiss

I realized this morning that it has been a while since my last post concerning my knitting projects, and that I had promised infrequent updates concerning their progress.

Is this infrequent enough?

About 3/4 of the way through my orange Alpaca/Marino wool for a new self scarf, I started to really hate it. The knit/purl pattern is awesome, but there's something about the wool that was starting to get to me. It gets a little fuzzy. Yes, I know most wool gets a little fuzzy, but I was menstruating and that always makes little things really irritate me. It took a LOT of convincing from a LOT of the kids I work with that ripping it out and starting over is NOT a good idea. We just need a break from each other. I need to see other wools; other projects.

A woman I work with taught me how to put a string through my stitches so as not to lose them but still be able to remove the scarf from the needles and start my new project: the blanket.
I had to cast it on three separate times. The woman who sold me the wool told me fifty stitches. This woman would have me make a dishcloth for all it turned out to be. I went up to a hundred: still not enough. One hundred fifty proved the magic number of stitches.

Needless to say, the first row (purled, no less) nearly killed me. (Anyone who knits will tell you it's the first row that's the hardest. I guess it does that to weed out the less dedicated or something.) After purling the first five whole rows, I started with a pattern: purl five, knit knit knit, then purl the last five to give you an edge.
Currently, three and a half balls in, it looks fabulous. Six balls may actually do it. I'm more than excited. However, the project is becoming quite cumbersome to carry around, and my boyfriend (whom I recently taught to knit, and it quite good!) just bought me this ADORABLE tiny little purse, perfectly sized for the new double ended needles on which I had placed my put-aside scarf...

Yesterday I picked up that scarf, stuffed it gently into my new purse and went to town on the streetcar headed to work. I didn't realize until then just how much I missed it. The magic is back. It doesn't even mind that I'm still seeing the blanket, and am currently planning a date with the new bright turquoise wool I bought a few weeks ago to make socks with. My scarf loves me unconditionally. I'm buying some more of the Alpaca/Marino today to make it longer.

In other news, the long black acrylic scarf I wear constantly is a pervert. It wraps itself inappropriately around my legs when I'm walking, crawls up into my crotch, does the "hungry butt" thing... and whenever I'm walking beside someone (girls only, mind), it touches them and wraps itself around their bodies in a most unseemly way. The scarf I made for Jessie's baby of the same wool recently tried to kill him. What have I unleashed into the world? What will I unleash next?
dun dun DUN!