I get emotional at the dentist. True, core-level, uncontrollable emotion. Not at the standard cleaning, but always with the deep cleans, the scalings, where they start by putting needles right into the soft wet skin at the tensest meeting of jaw muscles, the hinge behind the molars. I anticipate this for days and by the time I lean back in the chair, my heart flutters and the internal child I put through grad school in my therapy-rich twenties comes home eight all over again. I joke to the hygienist that I may cry, because making a direct joke about a deep fear is a defense mechanism I never consciously developed, but developed nonetheless. She jokes back, well, if you cry, I’ll probably start. And then she leans over me with blue-gloved hands, a tiny mirror in one and a syringe in the other, and says to relax and open wide. I almost don’t. For a second, I consider bolting upright and walking out. I’m an adult. I can do that. I can insist that you take your hands out my mouth today, Satan. But I don’t. Instead, I grip the armrests like I’m clinging to rock, hanging off a cliff, the strength of my hands the only intercessor between me and certain death. I close my eyes and open my mouth. As I feel the brush of her latex glove against my lip, a tear escapes my right eye, slides an inch toward my ear and stops, clinging to one invisible hair or laugh line. It stays through the entire procedure, like a companion, like a sister holding my hand, like a focal point I can laser onto instead of imagining what it looks like to poke sharp steel beneath my gums and pressure wash tartar away from the soft pockets. Even writing this now, when the numbness and soreness and shots are all long past, I feel a warm wetness build up in my eye, the right one, and my companion lets me know she never left. I don’t know what this old wound is that reopens periodontally. I imagine a past life in which I was gagged, knotted cloth jammed in my mouth, hands tied behind me, as I’m walked to a firing squad, helpless. Or maybe I was a prisoner of war who had each tooth pulled as my interrogators attempted to pry from me information I didn’t have. Or maybe it’s from this life, times when I felt hushed, or the opposite, times I found trouble when I refused to stay quiet. Or maybe it’s just that the soft wet skin at the tensest meeting of the jaw muscles feels like what the heart must feel like, soft and tough and reliable and so, so vulnerable. And sliding a needle into that place is precisely how feeling is born, where the sharp meets the soft, where healing hinges to pain. © 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
