Re: I am considering pulling my own tooth.
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2013 12:00 am
I think he's wisened up.
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Option 3: I get so grumpy at the beliefs of this nature, that I turn off my fear of pain, lace my tooth with oragel, down some Tylenol and yank the bleeping thing just to prove it can be done without something horrifically wrong happening (a mindset that I firmly believe dentists have propagated just to increase their own mythos and income, with the occasional "I USED MY SHOP VISEGRIPS AND WAS HALF DRUNK AT THE TIME" stories) and quite successfully. I then lift my tooth above my head with a savage roar, like the severed head of my enemies, and collapse in pain for about half an hour.ArcticFox wrote:Option 1: You go to the dentist, take the $$$ hit and thank yourself for it later.
Option 2: You try to yank it yourself, breaking the tooth in the process and probably leaving chunks of it behind in your gums. You will learn what the phrase "WORLD OF PAIN" means. You will find yourself in an Emergency Room a short time later at which point you will be paying for an ER bill, an emergency dental procedure, and possibly dental surgery to repair the damage depending on its severity. The $$$ hit will be about 5 times as much, the pain will be 10 times as intense, and I'll demand your address so I can mail you your official Government-issue "I am a bona fide moron" sign.
I'm glad you've decided to hold off.
Funny things have been known to happen. I lack the connections, but there's always a way.Drewsov wrote:We could always just pay someone to make the tooth "disappear".
You know... you go to sleep, and you wake up in a tub of ice, minus one wisdom tooth and one kidney. In Juarez.
Well, that's not true. This is just a case of "shooting myself in the foot" logic. If I get a splinter in my finger, should I shoot myself in the foot to distract me from the pain?ChickenSoup wrote:people who gripe about the costs of doctors don't realize how much it costs to get there or how much you have to pay (malpractice insurance, etc) once you're there.
Heck, I'm pre-physical therapy and I'm already not thinking about what my bills are going to be.
I have always wanted to visit Canada.Drewsov wrote:We could always just pay someone to make the tooth "disappear".
You know... you go to sleep, and you wake up in a tub of ice, minus one wisdom tooth and one kidney. In Juarez.
So don't blame the doctors for that. Blame the people who sue over nothing. I remember hearing an ER doctor talk about that a while back. The ER was packed, and one of the patients he was assigned to had stopped breathing and was close to dying. He spent a while trying to use certain tools so she could breathe, except she was severely obese and he said it made it difficult. He succeeded, she barely survived, and then he went down to his next patient who was a grandson of this elderly man. He threatened profusely to sue the doctor because he took a "long time" in getting to taking care of his son who ended up just having a bruised foot.Chozon1 wrote:
BTW, I don't actually hate dentists, as much as my rants would lead one to believe. Just the overinflated costs associated with them and all doctors.
What ohno said. No one's stopping you from pulling your own tooth, but if you want to see a professional (especially if, say, you needed actual surgery), there are costs associated with it. Either pull it yourself, ignore it, or bear the burden of a system of healthcare that has enormous costs assocated with it. Just don't blame the doctors (most of the time.).Chozon1 wrote:Well, that's not true. This is just a case of "shooting myself in the foot" logic. If I get a splinter in my finger, should I shoot myself in the foot to distract me from the pain?ChickenSoup wrote:people who gripe about the costs of doctors don't realize how much it costs to get there or how much you have to pay (malpractice insurance, etc) once you're there.
Heck, I'm pre-physical therapy and I'm already not thinking about what my bills are going to be.
Amigo, I know a bit about the ridiculous costs of becoming/being a doctor (since you hear on frequently whining about it, albeit with good reason), as well as the frightening perfection expected of them. That does not mean I can ignore the whosiwhatsits (which leads people to believe that only a dentist can pull a tooth) and extreme costs of visiting one (which leads to me, or to be honest my parents, having a bad case of the empty wallets).
So figs upon thy face my good man. FIGS.
BTW, I don't actually hate dentists, as much as my rants would lead one to believe. Just the overinflated costs associated with them and all doctors.
I have always wanted to visit Canada.Drewsov wrote:We could always just pay someone to make the tooth "disappear".
You know... you go to sleep, and you wake up in a tub of ice, minus one wisdom tooth and one kidney. In Juarez.
Didn't know I had been blaming the doctors.ohnolookout wrote:So don't blame the doctors for that. Blame the people who sue over nothing. I remember hearing an ER doctor talk about that a while back. The ER was packed, and one of the patients he was assigned to had stopped breathing and was close to dying. He spent a while trying to use certain tools so she could breathe, except she was severely obese and he said it made it difficult. He succeeded, she barely survived, and then he went down to his next patient who was a grandson of this elderly man. He threatened profusely to sue the doctor because he took a "long time" in getting to taking care of his son who ended up just having a bruised foot.
We live in a sue-happy culture, and the immense amount of malpractice insurance and such a doctor needs and the resulting costs is also immense. It's ridiculous.
Seemed like it to me. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯Chozon1 wrote: Didn't know I had been blaming the doctors.