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Not that I suppose anybody cares, but today a man used a pair of pliars
to rip one of my teeth out of my jaw bone.
Suffice it to say, it really hurts now. >_<
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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Orchid XP v8 <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
> Not that I suppose anybody cares, but today a man used a pair of pliars
> to rip one of my teeth out of my jaw bone.
> Suffice it to say, it really hurts now. >_<
I hope it was a wisdom tooth.
--
- Warp
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On Tue, 24 Aug 2010 19:58:17 +0100, Orchid XP v8 wrote:
> Not that I suppose anybody cares, but today a man used a pair of pliars
> to rip one of my teeth out of my jaw bone.
>
> Suffice it to say, it really hurts now. >_<
Hope you're feeling better soon - when I had my wisdom teeth out years
ago, I told them to knock me out for it (I had to have 3 pulled, only had
3).
Jim
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On 24/08/2010 7:58 PM, Orchid XP v8 wrote:
> Not that I suppose anybody cares, but today a man used a pair of pliars
> to rip one of my teeth out of my jaw bone.
>
Only one? Jammy B
> Suffice it to say, it really hurts now. >_<
>
I sympathise, 10 days ago I lost a fight with a dentist. Then it went
septic. :-(
--
Best Regards,
Stephen
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> Not that I suppose anybody cares, but today a man used a pair of pliars to
> rip one of my teeth out of my jaw bone.
I had a woman do mine :-) And from what I remember she actually used some
implement to *push* the tooth down into its socket really hard until it
cracked, then she just picked it out. It was a very bizarre feeling, when
your brain is telling you that this should be *really* hurting, but you
can't feel anything except for the reaction force on the back of your head.
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scott wrote:
> I had a woman do mine :-) And from what I remember she actually used
> some implement to *push* the tooth down into its socket really hard
> until it cracked, then she just picked it out. It was a very bizarre
> feeling, when your brain is telling you that this should be *really*
> hurting, but you can't feel anything except for the reaction force on
> the back of your head.
The whole process only took about 5 minutes. Which is weird.
Usually they get you in there, stab you a bit (which really hurts), and
then make you go sit outside for another 20 minutes. While you sit
there, half of your entire head slowly goes numb, until you look like a
person suffering some kind of neural malfunction. (Which, technically,
you are I suppose...) Then they lay you down in the chair for a couple
of hours with your mouth wide open while they poke around inside. All
you can do is try not to drown in your own saliva.
This trip was much shorter. They kepted me waiting until about 30
minutes after my appointment time, just to make sure I was utterly
nausious with adrenaline when I walked in. They lay me down and stabbed
me. I don't recall feeling any numbness. And then the dentist is like
"OK, let me have a little feel here..."
I remember the nurse holding my head still, and hearing a loud crunching
sound, and feeling something grinding around. And warm blood dripping
onto my face. They did some sewing, and then gave me some cotton to chew
on. And, eventually, they let me leave. (Feel quite dizzy after having
my feet on the ceiling for so long...)
When I got home, I looked like something out of a bad horror movie. My
teeth are stained red, brown and black with bloody goo, one side of my
mouth is actually glued shut with dry blood, and now my face is slowly
going numb.
About an hour later, the drugs wore off. Now, considering that I have
broken bones, severed arteries and ripped tissues, it didn't hurt nearly
*as much* as you'd imagine. But it still hurt quite a lot! **** me! >_<
Eventually a took some painkillers. It's almost impossible to swallow.
To do so, you have to press your toung against the roof of your mouth,
and it's quite hard to avoid the gaping hole at the side. Man, dried
saliva and dried blood tastes like crap! >_<
By the evening, it didn't actually hurt much at all. This morning I
discovered that I've drooled blood all over my pillow. (Niiice.) But
today it hardly hurts at all - which is surprising considering the
extreme magnitude of the injury...
PS. I'm still drooling brown goo.
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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Am 25.08.2010 11:42, schrieb Orchid XP v8:
> Usually they get you in there, stab you a bit (which really hurts), and
> then make you go sit outside for another 20 minutes. While you sit
> there, half of your entire head slowly goes numb, until you look like a
> person suffering some kind of neural malfunction. (Which, technically,
> you are I suppose...) Then they lay you down in the chair for a couple
> of hours with your mouth wide open while they poke around inside. All
> you can do is try not to drown in your own saliva.
When I had mine torn out, I was glad they let me have a little nap all
the while. They had already figured out from X-rays that one of those
bastards would be pretty difficult to get out, with one of its roots
bending back towards the other.
But I've had my share of waterboarding at the dentist's on other
occasions...
> By the evening, it didn't actually hurt much at all. This morning I
> discovered that I've drooled blood all over my pillow. (Niiice.) But
> today it hardly hurts at all - which is surprising considering the
> extreme magnitude of the injury...
>
> PS. I'm still drooling brown goo.
Remember, any noticeable taste of blood is /not/ part of the required
test protocol :-)
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scott wrote:
> some implement to *push* the tooth down into its socket really hard
I don't remember exactly what took out my first wisdom tooth, but I remember
it looked something like a corkscrew. Good thing I don't get nervous about
such stuff.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Quoth the raven:
Need S'Mores!
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>> PS. I'm still drooling brown goo.
>
> Remember, any noticeable taste of blood is /not/ part of the required
> test protocol :-)
The Material Emancipation Grill may, under rare circumstances,
emancipate gums, soft fillings, crowns, dentures, and teeth.
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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Warp wrote:
> I hope it was a wisdom tooth.
Actually no. One of the molers, right on the middle.
I only actually had one tooth taken out, but it seems to have left a
huge, gaping hole with almost no tooth left on that side. o_O
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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