My Teeth

Photo by Hubi Farago on Pexels.com

Despite the general decline of all bodily accoutrements: eyes, ears, nails, joints, I remain intrinsically happy, which I am forced to take as a certain sign of onrushing senility.  My teeth are falling out, not en masse you understand, not even one at a time, but bit by crumbling bit.  Whatever I chew, however soft, I get the tell-tale ‘crunch’ inside my head and the chunk of tooth in my food.  I count myself lucky if the broken pieces don’t manage to break something else.  Generally they try.  This is the most dispiriting of all age-related degradations.

I’m not certain if it is a normal feature of ageing, or merely a symptom of somebody who should have known better than to open beer bottles with his molars in his teens, but either way, I fear I may be all gum before I reach 70.  I picture Spinal Tap playing a concert in the wreckage of my mouth.  It would seem that teeth were not designed to last as long as we need them for.  Perhaps having your food pureed is an evolutionary marker.

When I was a child, I do not remember anything much in the way of ‘dental hygiene’: we all brushed twice a day and seldom ate sweets or ice creams because our parents were ‘not bloody millionaires’, yet we all had a mouthful of fillings.  Why?  Well obviously nothing to do with a NHS dental service that paid per filling and, to my recollection, rewarded good behaviour in the waiting room with a lollipop.  I do not remember ever having a toothache of any sort as a child, but nor do I remember ever visiting the school dentist without emerging with at least one excavated molar and sufficient mercury filling to raise the top of my head when the sun shone.

Amalgam fillings degrade and, as they do, fail to support the thin bone-china casing left surrounding them.  These days I dare not even chew my lip with worry.  In an earlier life I had to be familiar with the Moh’s Scale of Hardness.  On this scale Diamond is 10, Sapphire 9, Topaz 8… whilst at the bottom end we have Gypsum (2), Talc (1) and my teeth (not even worth the effort of giving a number to).

After I left school I continued with my regular dental check-ups, but went probably forty years without needing any kind of work whatsoever – these days I don’t seem to be able to go forty minutes without losing some fragment (either big or small) of tooth.  If the Tooth Fairy operated in adult circles – particularly if she made part-payments – I would be able to buy dentures.

As things stand, my teeth are still up to smiling, although probably not grinning.  I can chew most things, providing they do not have a hardness that is greater than my teeth (see Moh’s Scale above) I believe that an uncooked carrot has a hardness of 2; mashed potato has a hardness that almost exactly matches my molars, and a Curly Wurly (judging purely by the havoc it wreaks within my mouth) a reading of 12,000.

Of all the bits of me that are queuing up to fail, my teeth cause me the greatest angst.  Each time some foodstuff or another partially extracts one of my pearlies I vow never to eat it again.  With the exception of dry roasted peanuts, I succeed.  I do not want to be all gum; I do not want false teeth; I do not want to be one of those people who hisses with every word and most of all I do not want to have to endure the bewildered expression on the face of my dispirited dentist ever again.  She does her best.  She apologises when she gives me the bill.  And I just have to grin and bear it…

N.B. Sorry this is so late – real life impinged…

The Running Man and Dentistry

A single inadvertent chomp on a Curly Wurly and I was waving goodbye to my two week old filling.  Just a little nibble, on the other side of my mouth; what could possibly go wrong?  A second’s distraction.  Should soft caramel make a crunching noise?  No, clearly not.  Obviously my own fault, but it saddens me to know that once my tooth has been repaired, Curly Wurlys must be removed from my diet forever and onward.  Likewise the two mini Chomps I had hidden for future use.  If I’m honest, I do recall that the tooth made a very strange noise two days previously whilst I was eating a roast potato – yes, a roast potato; surely not the greatest of challenges for a newly refurbed gnasher.  Anyway, for now, here I am, running along with every intake of cool air twanging across my recently emasculated molar like a soft pick on a detuned ukulele.  It’s depressing.  Of the many things I expected old age to bring to me, I did not consider talcum powder teeth.

Running does somehow attune your head to the body, meaning that you become ever more conscious of the corrosive effects that time has upon mortal flesh.  I run in my contact lenses because glasses steam up, get rained on, fall off, and I dare not go ocularly commando because I cannot see beyond the end of my nose without something to enhance focus.  I would not recognise a familiar face until I had fallen over the owner; would not see the bus until I had caused it to stop in the most inopportune of fashions.  I am limited, even in lenses.  I have to make myself stop before crossing roads as all traffic becomes invisible to me if I am moving.  Joint-wise I am okey-dokey except for the hips, the knees and the ankles.  Everything below the waist aches after a run but, crucially, everything aches even more if I do not exercise.  Knees and ankles have long been a problem, but the hip, although late to the party, has now joined in with a vengeance.  It is the only joint that keeps me awake at night these days, although calf muscles have started to ache in the wee hours in a manner that suggests that they have heretofore been somewhat left behind in the atrophy stakes, but they are making every effort to come up on the rails now.

Anyway, my dentist informs me that I cannot be fitted in for another two weeks because I need an extended appointment that is not available until that point. What a lovely, relaxing thought, that re-fixing my recently fixed tooth will require an even more extended period of horizontal panic. I would have liked to have got this all sorted whilst I was on furlough, but unfortunately I am neither bleeding to death nor unable to eat, so there is no rush in these Covid-ruled times. I am well down the pecking order and, if I’m honest, I’m not in great pain so that’s ok. Until I cannot successfully gum on a gently wilting banana, I will live. And until the body finally decides that the downward trend of bodily vigour reaches terminal velocity, I will run – and if that doesn’t prove that the brain is going, nothing does…

Today’s top plodders:

  • Silly Love – 10cc
  • It’s a Beautiful World – Noel Gallagher
  • Smells Like Teen Spirit – Nirvana
  • Supremacy – Muse
  • Avonmore – Bryan Ferry
  • All my Life – Foo Fighters
  • Steel Town – Big Country
  • Cocaine – Eric Clapton (again – time for a new playlist)

The previous instalment of the running diary ‘The Running Man and Birthdays’ is here.
The next instalment of the running diary ‘The Running Man in the Dark’ is here.
The first part of the running diary ‘Couch to 5k’ is here.