BANGING THE HEAVY HONDURAN MAHOGANY EXECUTIVE GAVEL ON THE HUGE
AND HIGHLY GLOSSED, PRISTINE, AND POLISHED JAPANESE CHERRY BOARDROOM TABLE, the
top management at the HSR, votes and seconds all proposals that improve and
maintain your ”life feels so sweet, and my smile feels so sweet, too“ smile!
Yes, there are parts of your smile where the sun doesn’t
shine!
And those hidden, hard-to-get-to areas are mainly between the
teeth and under the gums.
The teeth and gums usually are so anatomically tight
together that photonic light can’t get into and reveal the inside of those dark,
hard-and-soft-tissue areas.
And I tend to think that the microbes in our mouths don’t
want the toothbrush and floss nosing around in their businesses—because they
want to multiply and prosper—just like we humans want to!
Those intimate gingival areas are the innermost, warmest, most opportunistic, and
most microbiologically active interfaces of the mouth.
These malicious microbiological enemies do their dirty deeds
in the shadows, where no one can see them, and work out their grand schemes to
take over and deteriorate our “oralas!”
These are also the same areas where the toothbrush—powered
or manual—finds difficulty in penetrating into, and disrupting the continually-growing
oral biofilms that take up residence there.
Interdental aids, including floss (waxed or unwaxed) need to
be used early and often to remove plaque where the eyes can’t visualize.
If the American Dental Association’s Healthy People 2010 survey
is to be believed, only 50.5% of people (almost 150 million of our current 313
million people) in the United States pick up and use floss daily.
The report does not say what percent of that group uses
floss toothpicks vs. floss string. Or if the average person’s flossing
technique removes subgingival plaque sufficiently.
That same survey states that 10% of Americans never
floss—that’s almost 31 million people, with unbearable breath! Do you know one?
Cleaning between the teeth with floss toothpicks can be of
value, but they only “stir up” the material found sloshing around between the teeth.
String floss can actually remove between-the-teeth material
alba as one pulls the floss out through the side from between the teeth.
Washing the hands well with hot water and soap, before using
floss and cleaning the teeth, is highly recommended, so germs won’t find their
way into your mouth through dirty fingers! Or just use gloves!
The author believes that before floss became more readily available
to the consuming public during the late 19th Century, everyone had
bad breath! It was just a matter of how bad…could one knock a painting off of a
wall just by toxically breathing on it?
So, floss first, then brush, then rinse, with an
appropriately revitalizing mouthwash!
When you close your mouth, and it becomes dark inside, do
the plaque microbes get up and dance on the tongue, making faces, and clowning around
until you open your mouth again?
Don’t believe me when I say that dental plaque is the sworn enemy? A convincing post!
May you have many…is darkness always on the other side of
light?... are our smiles the same in our parallel universes?...if we were to roll
up all of the floss used by everyone in the world in a year, it would be much
larger than Pee Wee Herman’s aluminum foil ball!.…smiles!
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