Freakodontics

As if sixth grade were not awkward enough, I spent mine as an orthodontic freak show. I was eleven years-old when I went under the knife for an impacted incisor tooth. Basically, one of my eye teeth was trying to shoot through the roof of my mouth. The oral surgeon exposed the tooth (ouch), attached a bracket to the exposed tooth (mommy!) and tied the bracket to the wire of my braces (ouch to your mother!).

Yeah, I was into heavy metal in the 6th grade.

Yeah, I was into heavy metal in the 6th grade.

It was very Looney Toons dentist with a string pulled taut between two teeth. The goal was to drag the one tooth into place, but I kept waiting for the string to break and some dental work to go flying.

The string that was supposedly guiding my tooth into place was knotted off in a big heap. It resembled a soggy piece of popcorn. I’d be giving my oral presentation on cumulus clouds at the front of the classroom and watch as the furrowed brows of my classmates tried to tell me: Kendra, you have a piece of--

I know. A piece of popcorn stuck in my braces.

The process of relocating my rogue tooth took three months, which translates to a biblical eternity of stale popcorn smiles in the social minefield that is sixth grade.

The good news is that it worked. The even better news is that I get to regale every dental professional with my history of freakodontics.

The Stanton children were an orthodontic powerhouse. I also rocked the mushroom cut long after the age it was okay to do so.

The Stanton children were an orthodontic powerhouse. I also rocked the mushroom cut long after the age it was okay to do so.

***

When I was 22, I went to a dentist whose office was near the community center where I worked in Boston. While the dental hygienist scraped and picked, I noticed a list on the office wall. The list included the names of all the patients who would be seen by the dentist that day, and next to the names were the patients’ phone numbers.

I considered the at-risk youth that I would be working with that afternoon, whom I saw every day but whom I made sure never got a hold of my phone number.

When the dentist entered, I asked him about the policy of placing patient names with contact information in such a public place. He said it convenienced the staff, having all the information so handy. But couldn’t the list be placed where no patient could read it? I asked.

I watched as the dentist took a ballpoint pen and crossed off my name and phone number. “That all right?” he asked. “No one can read it now.”

Feeling violated, I called the HIPAA hotline to see if I might have a case against this dentist for what seemed to me a sloppy management of personal information. The hotline attendant said my case was weak, especially as the list had been posted in a room with a limited viewership. It wasn’t as if the whole waiting room was privy to our digits.

I staged a silent protest of the dentist’s policies, like spitting into the wind. I never went to see him again.

***

Within four minutes of being seated in the chair at my dentist's office in the south, the dental hygienist, whom I had only just met that day, asked me about my plans to add more children into my life. She scraped and picked and gave me the sucking implement for when it was time to spit.

My mouth ajar, the only reflex I could control was my urge to spit. This is, as I have learned since sixth grade, sometimes all any of us can control.

Until we open our mouths, we can conceal so much. Our fears about invasion of privacy. Our feelings about having a(nother) baby. Our pieces of stale popcorn, real or facsimile, wedged conspicuously between our braces.

They told me to put my chin down because my glasses were causing a glare here. I thought it was my pearly white teeth!

They told me to put my chin down because my glasses were causing a glare here. I thought it was my pearly white teeth!

My relationships with dental professionals have been numerous and frequent. In many ways, I can thank them for exposing not only my teeth, but my deeply-lodged fears and anxieties.

But I also find that our fears and chagrins have a way of fighting their way out. Every sixth grader eventually finds reason to speak. Just as every dental patient will eventually find reason to cry, “ouch” or “stop.” When the moment of truth finally arrives, we cannot reverse history. The laws of motion seem to make no exemption for spit.

It doesn’t take an oral surgeon to expose our most hidden deposits. Sometimes all any of us has to do is open up and say, “Ah.”

Here's the dentist - dr-averbuch.co.il.

The race continues: in memory of Martin Richard

April is upon us; it will be one year since the bombs exploded at the finish line to the Boston Marathon. My heart still breaks. We say, "my heart is breaking for those people," all the time, but we don't mean it. We feel sympathy and imagine how awful those affected must feel, and then we move on. The next tragedy lights up CNN's ticker and our watercooler chatter.

Once you have experienced true heartbreak due to the end of a relationship or the loss of a loved one, you know what that entails.  You carry the ache with you, and maybe it will subside incrementally with the passing of a season, but it never truly leaves you. That ache, at once pronounced and eventually more dull, is always there. Its imprint is permanent so that it changes you.

The bombings in Boston on April 15, 2013 changed me, and I know I am not alone in this.

Many of us can mention a word and it flips a switch in our consciousness, such that when my friend Litch finds himself complaining, his wife Shelley will simply say, "Haiti," and Litch's purview on what constitutes a real problem shifts. He remembers the abject poverty he and Shelly observed on their trips to Haiti. He knows the flat tire on his Prius is a privilege, not a problem.

For me, I've not had many of these consciousness changers. I was born into privilege, I have known a life of comfort, I have experienced season after season of relative ease.

But for the last year, the mere mention of the name "Richard" has sent me reeling. I see their late son Martin Richard with the deep pools of brown eyes reminding us with his magic marker scrawled message to pursue Peace. To stop hurting people. I think of his mom, Denise Richard, my first neighborhood mama friend in Dorchester. I think of their family and their pain and their loss and then I think of their triumph just in putting one foot in front of the other, or, in the case of their daughter Janie Richard, putting one prosthetic leg in front of her God-given Irish step-dancing leg. That's all I need to reframe this moment in time. I hug my children more tightly, I give thanks for the blessing of scrubbing pee-soaked bathroom floors for these people; I give pause because--the Richards.

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This is not to say that I give thanks in any way for the unimaginable pain of the Richards (or anyone with sense memories of that day). Their tragedy is not for my utility.  I am thankful, simply, that our stories continue.

If one motif has crystallized for me in these last twelve months, it is this: that the wisdom of the Marathon bombings is about the heart of children never leaving their parents, and the heart of parents never truly leaving their children.

  • Anzor Tsarnaev left his children in the United States in 2011; he was ill with cancer and vowed not to die in America. He was not able to bury his eldest son; he may never see his youngest son again.
  • Denise and Bill Richard, both injured, had to leave Martin at the scene of the crime. They had to leave their slain son, an innocent lamb, where police stood protecting him until all evidence had been gathered. He was covered with the sheet from a nearby restaurant. Under a pure sheet of white, Martin laid. 
  • An all-loving father in Heaven sent his only son to a broken planet and allowed him to die for crimes he never committed.

But none of these stories ends there. Tsarnaev will mourn his sons and his family's dissolution. The Richards will mourn Martin and they will heal and they will fight the flames of hatred with peace through the MR8 Foundation. They bring beauty from ashes and I am moved to tears at the very thought of the name Richard.

And my savior rose on the third day, a day that is marked this year one day before the Marathoners will lunge and launch into 26.2 miles of self-inflicted agony to test their bodies' endurance  to reach the finish line.

Those who cheer on the sidelines, those who assist the injured, those who protect and serve and report and promote peace--they are all a part of this story that continues as we all run this hard race until glory beckons us all home.

***

To contribute to the MR8 Foundation, you can make a tax-deductible contribution here. 

Resume of Celebrity Encounters

Have you ever thought about the famous people you may or may not have met in aggregate? If so, did it remind you of the wonderfully whimsical and star-studded life you've been blessed to lead or did it make you feel all sorts of depressed? Well, I will have you know that *I* think the fact that you met the Snapple Lady makes you awesome. I am striving to remember the semi-star-studded encounters that dot my past. Here are the ones I can recall ::elitist sigh since there have been so many::

Ted Koppel - Unremarkable personality but great hair. Met him when my internship bossman in DC invited a group of interns and staffers to have lunch with him.

Sam Donaldson - Terrifically spirited. Spoke at an internship thingy in DC.

Helen Thomas - Spunky, smart, and very hard of hearing by the time I met her. She spoke at another lunchtime roundtable at my internship in DC. Helen Thomas

Kristen Bell - My friend Greg took her home for Thanksgiving. They were classmates at NYU. This was before Veronica Mars and Sloths and Frozen. She is incredibly beautiful in person so to keep myself from nervously gawking at her, I talked about her bracelets and she told me she bought them from a street vendor in Manhattan and then I went back to staring at her pretty face.

Audra McDonald - Way down-to-earth. Very quick to laugh. I met her after "Ragtime" on Broadway. This picture is the second time I met her - at Blossom Music Center near Cleveland, Ohio.

Audra 1999

Hilary Clinton - Sat behind her on a plane traveling from NYC to DC (when she was a NY Senator--remember that?). I walked with her to the baggage claim. She is a petite woman.

Jason Mraz - So this one makes me a hipster wannabe. I won free tickets through a radio station in Boston to see Mraz's show at the House of Blues. It was right after his single "The Remedy" was becoming really big. I was standing outstide HofB waiting for my friend Adam to meet me to give him the other ticket. A group of people get out of a purple Mazda and haul all kinds of instruments inside and as he passes me with his scruffy face and hat, I realize it is Jason Mraz and it still makes me proud that I saw him live when he was touring in a Mazda.

annebancroft

Anne Bancroft - She was likely in the late stages of uterine cancer when I met her but she was still absolutely beautiful. She told a group of us at this summer writing conference to capture a caterpillar and let me tell you, you just do what Mrs. Robinson says.

Billy Collins - Great poetry teacher at a summer writing conference. Unscrupulous in other ways.

Paul Simon - sat in front of me at an outdoor reading at the summer writing conference. Pretty much my height.

Ray Romano - We heard him before we saw him on Martha's Vineyard. That voice! That man! With twin boys! Loverpants and I spun on our heels and awkwardly watched them play skeeball in a video arcade.

Frank McCourt - demured when I asked him at the summer writing conference if he would do an Irish jig with me, "Maybe a Venetian Waltz," said he. Absolutely adorable.

Frank.McCourt.jpg

Nate Berkus and Bethenny Frankl - The one cool thing I have done in my 30s besides paying taxes has been getting to be an audience member on the Nate Berkus Show. His guest was Bethenny Frankl. She makes me laugh.

Those are some of the more remarkable encounters although most of them are probably lame compared to all of your backstage pass experiences. You can tell I am not a big sports fan, either.

I also saw Ben Stein walking around Copley Square in Boston; he winked at me. I'm still not sure how I feel about this.