| Let
us turn away, at the start of this wonderful new year,
from all the things that make us despair because we
don’t know what to do about them, to something
we can do something about. Teeth. Anyone young enough
to have never given their teeth a thought can stop reading,
now. Anyone of the real old school, when Irish women
got all their teeth extracted before marriage so as
to assure the oul’ fella that they’d never
cost him a penny, can also stop reading.
They
solved one problem that way, though I daresay they landed
themselves with another. In my childhood, if you howled
with a toothache for long enough to extract a grudged
half-a-crown from your mother, you went into O’Connell
Street and climbed the stairs over the Kylemore Dairy
and they put some rubber bondage stuff on your head
and the gas machine panted like a dragon and the next
thing you woke up, sans tooth, in a daze. I have a feeling
child dentistry is a bit more sophisticated now, though
who can say that such experiences didn’t toughen
us all up and turn us into survivors?
New York dentists can and do advertise, and they more
or less promise these days that you need never lose
a tooth. You need never have teeth that stick out or
teeth that recede. Above all, you need never have discoloured
teeth. The practice I go to in Manhattan is a sight
to see every day at lunchtime. There is a long corridor
with kind and open cells on each side, and in each cell,
reclining and watching television during lunch hour,
is a man or a woman with a tray attached to their face.
They have dropped in for an hour of bleaching. Bleached
teeth are a near-necessity when it comes to looking
like a winner. Anyway, Americans love that dazzling
white. It is the end-result of technology mastered,
of effort chosen, of money expended, of actions taken.
It is a visible sign of having acted in the face of
destiny: not just lain down and fatalistically accepted
the hand that nature dealt you.
I
got teeth capped and veneered in that luxury place.
Talk about coming full circle from O’Connell Street.
The dentist phones a prescription for a few Valium to
my local pharmacy and I take one or two an hour before
my appointment and wobble in, full of goodwill. The
assistant lies me down and wraps me in a soft, heated
blanket. He asks me which of the CDs they keep for me,
personally, I’d like to listen to today. I don’t
really know what happens next except that the dentist
breeds canaries and we often talk about canaries and
indeed, he leant me a canary at one point but all it
did was kick birdseed at my bed. I leave the office,
feeling wonderful. There is some serious business with
my Visa card on the way out but I barely notice.
Then I come home to Ireland, and every time I open my
mouth someone starts staring at my new teeth. A too-candid
friend said, “In the name of God, where’d
you get the teeth?” Other people just laughed.
See, I’d forgotten. You’re not supposed
to improve yourself, here. You’re supposed to
assert your gritty authenticity by a display of yellowing,
crooked, brownish bits and pieces of teeth that have
that amazing merit of being untouched by the 20th century.
Well,
believe me, my dears, you get no thanks in the United
States of America for fidelity to natural decay. You
see someone shudder about someone and say, “Ugh!
Did you see those British teeth?” It is out of
the question that you could have any career in the entertainment
or commercial world, not to mention any erotic career,
with the kind of teeth that walk around Dublin.
The
philosophical difference is interesting. Does our attitude
to our corporeal selves derive from our past as an oppressed
and pauperized population, indifferent to our bodies
except as they will be transfigured on the Last Day,
and placing hope of perfection in the next world and
not in this one?
Does
the American attitude have to do with Protestant self-respect
in the here and now? With individualism? With materialism
at its best? Is it all to do with money? What would
Martin Amis (whose gnashers were well-publicised) have
done if he’d had no money? What would I have done
if I hadn’t unexpectedly made the price of my
bits of porcelain?
All
I know is that the whole world is in the debt of the
American drive to control what of our natural selves
can be controlled. The contraceptive pill has been a
boon to the human race of such importance that I’m
convinced we have what is known as God to thank for
it. The present Pope doesn’t believe that, of
course, but he might if he was a woman who’d had
two children instead of twelve and consequently had
teeth in her head instead of pustulent gums.
Because
I need hardly say that our deepest self-image, as well
as our physical well-being, is connected with our teeth.
We judge our time of life by our teeth. Someday I will
give in and admit that I am old and that I must retire
from the human race and share my bed with mongrels and
cats. When I do, it will be because there’s nothing
more I can do about my teeth.
nofaolain@irish-times.ie
If you are interested in porcelain veneers, teeth whitening, or any other cosmetic dentistry procedure, please contact our Manhattan Dentist Office to schedule an initial cosmetic dentistry consultation with New York Cosmetic Dentist Dr. Iott.

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