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| TEETH. American Museum of Natural History, New York City, August 2014 |
On Wed. March 11th I went to the Dentist Whom I Do Not Trust (DWIDNT?) and acquired my first crown, on a tooth that has not been causing me any pain or trouble. I kvetched and moaned beforehand to anyone who would listen. My friends offered concern and solace, patiently telling me that they had had this procedure and it was not painful. Expensive dental work without pain? Can’t be, I reasoned.
I entered the appointment in a bad mood, because of All The Things, including but not limited to anticipation of pain. I told the dentist at the start that I was nervous, for which the response was the usual medical-personnel brushoff, “Oh, you’ll do fine.”
This reminds me of Nov 2016 after the Orange Menace was first elected, when someone at church said to me, “It will be okay.” It has not been okay. It has been horrendous.
I said to the Dentist Whom I Do Not Trust, “You’ve done a billion of these, right?” Yes, pretty much. He spent about 30 seconds administering the local anesthetic, went away until I was numb, came back and spent about 5 minutes drilling the old filling out. Then he left the room, never to be seen again by me that day. The rest of the work that hour was done by Kelly, the Person Whose Title I Don’t Know. Or maybe her name was not Kelly. I don’t remember. (I wish that I would be handed a card at every dentist visit that says, “Your hygienist today was FirstName” because after six months I can never remember the hygienist’s name.) I was worried about how the dentist was going to be, professionally, but I should have worried about how the Unknown Titled Person would be. She did a lot of intricate work to make the temporary crown.
They knew I had never before received a crown, and that it was a long time since I had had anything done requiring local anesthetic. I wanted them to tell me, for each part of the procedure, exactly what they were doing. They did not. Informing the patient is too much to ask in 2026. As best I could, I asked questions, despite my mouth being numb. But if I didn’t ask, there was very little info forthcoming.
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| Wedding crowns from Pakistan. |
I was told what not to eat, and not to floss, that it’s probably a good idea to rinse with warm salt water, the warmer the better. This info should be handed to the dental patient after the procedure, on a little card which also says, “Your hygienist today was FirstName.” I am now terrified to brush my teeth on that side.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that I had no pain, even after the anesthetic wore off. All my friends were telling me the truth, and I am grateful. I rinsed with salt water, while the Common Household Husband peppered me with questions: How much salt? How hot the water? How often? I have no idea, because I was not handed a little card with detailed instructions. I am the grandchild of a train engineer and the daughter of an engineer and a teacher. I want detailed instructions. Or, to put it more bluntly, I want to be pampered.
It is a temporary crown, but gives me the authority to say, on March 28th, “You say ‘No Kings’, but I actually have a crown. Bwa ha ha ha !.” It is very unlikely I will actually say that.
I offer no final judgment until I receive the permanent crown. The temporary one makes me feel like I have glue on my gums.
*** Two days later ***
On Friday March 13, 2026 we had a huge wind storm, which knocked the power out, just after I finished cooking dinner. We ate dinner in the light of the shabbat candles. I had just charged up my kindle earlier in the day. The Common Household Husband was home and, though his EV was below 50%, it had enough charge to run the fridge. The outside temperature was above freezing. No trees fell on the house. You can decide if all of that means Friday the 13th is lucky or unlucky. The power was off until around 3 PM the next day.
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| Near our son's apartment |
During the night, I skipped around on my kindle, starting three new books and eventually finishing one I had been reading, in the hopes of falling back asleep. I had been longing to have the concentration to sink my teeth into a long book, and I took this as my opportunity, although it is hard to concentrate with the wind howling. I bought a 571-page Pulitzer-Prize-winning history book about Cuba. I am enjoying it so far. I will probably finish it in July.
We made it through the night, waking up on Saturday to an ambient temperature of around 58 degrees in the house. Brrr! We got up and made our way to Eat ‘N’ Park, a fine local eating establishment, where we found everyone else also in search of a hot breakfast.
I completely forgot to rinse with salt water. But I still remain without any pain or infection. So far.
We cleaned up branches and sticks from the yard until the bin was full. We drove over to our son’s apartment – his power had been restored Friday afternoon – charged our devices, chatted, and went for a strenuous walk to view the local damage. When we returned home in the afternoon, the power had been restored about half an hour prior. NAPTIME.
So we have electrical power back at our house (not so much for my church, sadly), and I have temporary regal gear, at least for Molar #31. This afternoon, the wind is really picking up speed again. Thanks, 2026.
Voting is my superpower, and probably yours too. I refuse to cede that power: I have a crown.
Hope to see you all in the streets on March 28th.
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| No huge branches down in our yard. |
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| The bin is full but we still have more branches to put in it. And another windstorm today. |
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| Does she wear a crown or a tiara? |






















