Today I took a ride in the creek after I got the second of two root canal visits done. Same tooth, just had to do the panama canal of root canals apparently. Like after the first visit the guy who was gentle said, well I can't quite get to the end of this root, I'm going to have the specialist do it tomorrow if you can come back and I was like I thought YOU were the specialist.
But then today I met the specialist and what makes him special is he calls you my friend with his mouth while looking at you with the eyes of a dead serpent. Then he takes a novocain shot the size of a gas nozzle and crams it in your very trusting gummy face, the one you use to look up at carousels in wonder. But at least he presses the plunger like he's trying to flush out the biggest turd on the biggest water slide at Roaring Rapids. Imagine being married to THIS guy, or worse, in prison with him.
I say to him tentatively when he's telling me all the things that could go wrong as he assembles a trampoline in my mouth, I say they did most of the work yesterday, I say hopefully, eye gesturing to the large xray on the wall, big as a motel painting. Mengele just raises a smokey grey manicured eyebrow like we'll see about that and I opened wide because well, that was the only way in.
I'm not kidding, if you see your patient's legs go straight out when you're giving a novocain shot you might want to vary your technique by considering that the person wearing those legs is an alive person. Maybe Morgue Morty here is used to practicing root canals on bodies he fishes out of the LA river.
All I know is, his assistant was nice, a sturdy guy with huge messy hair like Meatloaf, and he kept looking at me with eyes like I'm sorry but he signs my checks.
At least this office started being nice to be AFTER they told me they wouldn't take my insurance which I found out is actually illegal since they do TAKE my insurance in reality, and my parents were like here let us help you since your face hurts so bad let's get it done. What do people do who don't have nice parents and a lot of tooth pain, I'll tell you what they do, it's called meth. I only know this since I drove directly from my first appointment to DPSS to try and fix my insurance and I was in line with people who use umbrellas as homes. Fixing teeth is maybe 55th on their list, behind stealing guns and fistfighting. I felt like Jimmy Stewart in there, I wanted to climb on a desk and wave my papers and say we don't have to live like this the government is supposed to help us when we're workers who make a smaller dollar. We're still important! But instead I just turned my ring around so the diamond didn't show (the only jewelry on me) and of course the lady in the booth told me I was in the wrong office and to go to the right one on Monday. So I left with my aching jaw, past the skinny sunburnt tweakers with their necks all worn away and I took my social injustice to my car where I left it in the gutter.
Because it's hard to fight for rights when your face hurts.
So now I have an appointment in three days to get my crown fitted and then in two weeks I'll have hopefully the last dental visit of my lifetime putting that bastard on and being done with it and feeling like a king. I just feel bad I wasted my parents' money when the state could have paid for it. They could have spent it on Fritos or hookers or taken hookers out to pizza or anything with hookers. Instead they put their money where my mouth is.
Every bite I take, I'll be thanking you. Little known Sting lyric.
The point of this blog was going to be, that AFTER ALL THIS, I was riding in the creek because root canal be DAMMED and half my face was numb but I made it to the water with the most gentlest two horses a girl could have, young Janey and old Dewey, and Jane rolled immediately and then we just sloshed slowly upstream, and listened to water, and ambled, and stood again, and listened, and I said out loud all the people and things I'm grateful for at almost 60 tomorrow, and believe me you were on there, and I cried and sprinkled my fresh teary water into the creek because grateful water should always mingle with rambling peaceful water. And now the creek and I are one.
I am grateful for every moment of my ever evolving life, and all the paths that keep unfolding. Even the old everyday ones that I cherish so much I do them every single day and grateful to wake up to them waiting for me to be there to walk them. An old house, an old barn, an old car, an old creek, some old kids, some old parents, an old husband, some old dogs and horses, a flaking pool, some mismatched furniture, some tuna on crackers, a few carrots, some ripe peaches, what else does a person need.
Just one more day, maybe.
