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The Tooth Hurts Part 1

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by Mike Fenn

When you are a kid, the medical professional that you interact with the most, more than your pediatrician, more than your gynecologist, even more than (but possibly due to) Dr Pepper, is your dentist. It is drilled into your head (and, occasionally, your jaw) that childhood tooth maintenance is of the utmost importance. 

Twice a year, my mom would take my younger sisters and I to the dentist, which was a small father-and-son practice adjacent to–seriously–a seedy hotel that rented rooms exclusively to crackheads and meth addicts. I guess they wanted to position themselves strategically for business. My childhood dentist visits took place in the 1980s, meaning that the office decor and magazine selection was only 10 or 20 years out of date.

While my sisters got examined by the younger dentist, who was always cheerful, silly, and seemingly NEVER found cavities in their mouths, I saw the elder DDS, like my mom. He was older, methodical, and often grumpy. Being raised Catholic, I always assumed that *I* was the source of his moody demeanor, with my apparent wanton disregard for my daily oral care the sour point of his day, if not his life. Now that I’m older, I of course know that the demeanor was due to being stuck next to a run-down crackhead hotel all day.

At my regular doctor, I was never made to feel bad if I came down with a cold. I was just prescribed delicious liquid medicine and several days off from school to watch The Price is Right–Bob Barker episodes, no less!

But when I formed a cavity? My dentist would be upset. Not angrily upset, but more of that “disappointed” kind of upset which stung more. What’s worse, he had a slow, soothing voice, which is weird when it is being stern. If I had to describe it, I’d call it “evil Bob Ross.” In fact, the remedy for cavities was not tasty liquid pharmaceuticals or time off from school; instead, it was ANOTHER VISIT to the dentist for him to FILL the cavity. 

In all fairness, there were a few positive aspects of going to the dentist, aside from, you know, a clean oral bill of health (but let’s face it; no kid or meth addict cares about that; if they did, they wouldn’t eat stuff like Cap’n Crunch). The cinnamon-flavored spray that he used was very tasty AND, at the end of the visit, we got to select a toy from the small toy box he kept on his floor. Granted, these were toys of a caliber shared only with those prizes that you see offered for the least amount of skee ball tickets at the arcade redemption counter, like plastic spider rings, tiny magnifying glasses, and stickers. But it was enough to satisfy younger, dumber versions of ourselves and not mind so terribly that we had to see this guy again in 6 months. 

When I got older, I had to have my wisdom teeth removed. This was apparently a serious and somewhat unavoidable procedure. I couldn’t even have my own dentist do it. Instead, I had to be sent to an oral surgeon, a total stranger with NO toy chest and NO crackhead hotel, whose office looks like it only dated back to the 1990s. Ironically, I made the decidedly UNWISE decision to have this done with only a local anesthetic instead of being put to sleep, something that pretty much EVERYONE else, including dentists themselves and people who still have their wisdom teeth, opt for. Admittedly, I was a bit afraid of the fine print on the anesthesia literature that was provided to me that said full anesthesia could trigger cardiac arrest. My dad’s side of the family, which includes me (I’m fairly certain), has a history of heart disease. I was about to visit my friend Bill in Hawaii and didn’t need to have an anesthesia-induced heart attack ruin that just because my dentist decided that I needed 4 less teeth in my mouth for whatever reason. Thus, I opted for the local anesthesia, which subsequently had me opting for a lot of painful screaming, a refusal to have my last wisdom tooth removed (it is seriously still there to this day), and a LOT of post-surgery Percocet.

Since that day back in 2006, I have not been to the dentist at all. I still brush my teeth daily and do other things to keep my teeth as healthy as possible, like swallowing my Cap’n Crunch whole instead of chewing it. But I decided that dentists no longer needed to be a part of my life, especially since they refuse to let you pick something from the toy chest in your 30s and 40s.

And then, that all changed a few weeks ago.

On Christmas Eve 2022, I got an abscess on my two back teeth (which, when I later checked, was definitely NOT on my Christmas wish list). Its bulge in my cheek was very noticeable to my family and probably even the blind, while its pain was very noticeable to me. When it comes to tooth pain, nothing compares to it. You stop EVERYTHING you are doing, even driving, and dedicate yourself to finding ANY relief that you can. Tom Hanks proved this in cast Away when he used an ICE SKATE to knock out his problematic tooth while stranded on the island; he experienced so much relief from that that he befriended a volleyball. I myself opted for a variety of products with “Orajel” in the name, primarily because the pharmacy didn’t carry ice skates. Additionally, whatever doctor who drew the short straw and had to work the emergency line at my primary physician’s office for Christmas prescribed me an antibiotic. While these methods helped reduce the swelling and even pain, the writing was on the wall: I had to find a dentist.

The dentist I had seen for years as a child was unavailable, due to being dead. Thus, I had to do a search for a new dentist who accepted my insurance. It wasn’t reassuring that most of the offices I called haven’t even HEARD of my insurance, while others, when stating the name of my coverage, reacted the same way toward it as they would if I told them I would be coming in and demanding dental care at gunpoint. Finally, I located an office that accepted my coverage and made an appointment.

My new dentist looked like Michael Chiklis. He was muscular and one of those proudly bald guys who keeps the look despite the fact that the back of his head looked like three raw loaves of bread stacked on top of one another. If you went in with a loose tooth, he wouldn’t pull it; he looked like the kind of guy who would punch it out of your face. I sat down in the chair and he stretched the sides of my mouth into the neighboring time zone to get a look at my teeth.

“When was the last time you saw a dentist?” he asked.

I replied honestly.

“Yeah, that’s definitely an abscess. These two teeth need to come out,” he said with the same air of disappointment that I heard from my childhood dentist so many times.

“Like eventually?” I asked.

“Like yesterday,” he replied.

Needless to say, this was not a procedure he could do in his office. He told me that I would need to find an oral surgeon. Hooray – back into the “Do you accept my insurance, or at least have you heard of it?” pool for me! He also told me that I might need to see a “gum specialist” on top of it.

At the risk of sounding like an elderly person here, when did dentistry require so many different people? What the hell is a “gum specialist?” Shouldn’t they ALL be gum specialists? In fact, shouldn’t they ALL be able to remove teeth? With the exception of my wisdom teeth, my own childhood dentist pulled any loose teeth that I went into his office with, including the one that I worked loose by–seriously–rolling a Fruit Roll-Up into a ball and trying to chew on it that way. This office was, like every other dentists’ office I have been to (all two of them), filled with all sorts of terrifying-looking machinery. What the hell was it for, then, if it couldn’t be used to pull two of my non-wisdom teeth? 

Anyway, he refilled my script for antibiotics and sent my mouth and I back out into the world, though I could tell that he would have preferred that I left my mouth in his office, where I couldn’t damage it any further. After some more back-and-forth with insurance, I eventually found an oral surgeon not located in a back alley who agreed to pull the two affected teeth. I was half-expecting her to tell me that I needed one kind of dentist to pull one of the teeth and a different dentist to pull the other one (“Oh, I only specialize in the rear-middle teeth”). 

My appointment is this coming Wednesday, March 8. This time, I will be accepting full anesthesia, which will be the first time in my 42 years of life that I will be put to sleep for a medical procedure. I won’t lie to you: it scares the shit out of me. All I can think about is that piece of paper back in 2006 that said it is possible that the anesthesia can cause cardiac arrest–something which, of course, was reiterated on the same piece of paper I received from the oral surgeon here in 2023. However, I am going into this procedure with a completely different mindset than the one I had in 2006, namely: society sucks now and if I have to drop dead in a dental chair in New Jersey getting two rotten teeth pulled, oh well. I have no upcoming plans to visit Hawaii, anyway.

If the Grim Reaper decides to keep me on this planet, however, I will follow up this piece next week with an update of how my first experience under general anesthesia went. I am hoping that I emerge unscathed, pain-free, and, of course, with a brand new plastic spider ring toy.

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Putt Putt Golf N Games N Arcade N Nachos N…

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by Mike Covers

I recently had the opportunity (translation: was bored enough) to go to Delaware County’s popular “Putt Putt Golf ‘N Games” attraction with a few friends of mine. As with any night out at the miniature golf course, the coming hours promised to be filled with fun, laughter, and violent, homicidal thoughts toward a rented golf ball. We got there sometime between 12PM and 12AM (I don’t own a watch).

The first step of our plan was the most important part: using the restroom. We had just come from a Burger King that still places its soda fountain out in the middle of its dining area, well within the reach of our large-sized cups. In other words, refills are unlimited. The Putt Putt facilities were nothing more than small holes in the wall, furnished with a toilet, sink, and a stench equal to that of a dead, constipated, rotting animal on a hot day.

Next, we purchased our games. We opted for a single round, in that physical exertion was never popular among my group of friends (“physical exertion,” in this case, meaning something more than mashing buttons on a video game controller or digesting Burger King food in our half-blood, half-fountain-soda bloodstreams). We were given brightly colored golf balls to play with; I chose the green colored ball for two reasons: a) it’s my favorite color, for it is the color of money; b) it was the only one left. We also selected our clubs, which ranged in size from “Short” to “Toothpick.” It is a common rule at miniature golf courses that the clubs should be at a comfortable length for people no taller than a Ninja Turtles action figure. Our final ingredients were the official scorecard and official eraser-free pencil, which itself rivaled the size of our clubs. A miniature golf scorecard is used for many different things, such as recording the players’ strokes at each hole, totaling up the final scores at the end, and to further fill up the official Putt-Putt Golf ‘N Games trash cans, their contents already comprised of used scorecards and, presumably, erasers.

We stepped up to the first hole and chose an order to play in, through the grueling task of seeing who would put their ball down first. Each person got a chance to tap the ball across the course and into…a patch of Astroturf approximately one molecule away from the hole. This managed to launch us into a barrage of swear words so vile that they would make Denis Leary cringe in offense. We also employed the technique of “Psych-out” mini-golf, where we would attempt to verbally sabotage another player using visual images featuring various ugly people we knew engaging in graphic, often physics-defying, sexual positions with certain species of animal.

The above paragraph pretty much described the events that took place at each hole, in addition to the fact that I was the only one who couldn’t live up to the “Par 2” standard at each hole. Judging from my golfing skills that night, I would not be safe on a Par 4036 course. Some holes offered obstacles, such as raised surfaces which would cause the ball to approach the hole, teeter on the edge of it for a moment, then roll BACKWARDS to the starting pad, where the current player was already unleashing colorful swears. Another type of obstacle included various painted objects rising up from deep within the roots of the Astroturf, designed to either bump the ball in its intended direction or (more often) into an unexpected direction, such as off the current course and inside a potted plant several courses away. Yet another obstacle was a small pool of water, which acted as a nuisance but did clean the plant’s topsoil off the ball.

Finally, our game came to an end and the scores were tallied up; I received the highest score and, for some reason, was the only one proud of this fact. We proceeded to return our balls, replace the clubs in their protective cigar boxes, and listen to the clerk tell us how wrong/inappropriate/illegal everything was that we did or yelled. Afterwards, we rested from our 3-hour round of golf (we all REALLY suck) in the arcade on the premises. I tried my hand at skee ball, where I easily scored 500 points, which translates to two prize tickets. I also played a game of pinball, earning 54 billion points simply by starting the game. I was able to trade in my prize tickets for a tiny plastic spider ring, which seemed to be worth 37 times less than the actual tickets. Nevertheless, I kept my hard-earned, 25¢ prize and proudly displayed it in my trash can.

After a short snack of nachos and pizza, my friends and I left, our goals of paying money to tap balls into 18 different cups satisfied for another year. It was time to go back to Burger King for more refills.

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Inaction News

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by Mike Covers

The events of this story took place back in 2002, during my senior year of college. I dubbed it worthy enough for not only documentation, but also for inclusion in the university’s newspaper. Perhaps that is why the newspaper never earned any awards/recognition/readership.

On that day, I took off from classes due to a mild sickness which involved a stuffy nose, sore throat, and a massive splitting headache (imagine having a bowling ball dropped on your skull; I would have preferred THAT over the type of headache I was suffering). Fortunately, Ny-Quil, Excedrin, and several straight hours on America Online’s Instant Messenger (again, it was 2002) proved to be just the remedy I needed to feel over 15% better the next day.

I was not prepared for the phone call I received.

Usually, weekday calls to my family’s house were limited to telemarketers and my parents calling to remotely play the saved messages on our answering machine, which mainly consisted of 5,211,080 calls beginning with “This is Verizon AT&T Sprint Arctic Bell calling with a special offer…”, which were all promptly deleted (and, when it was my dad calling in, cursed at).

Around the middle of the day, I received a phone call from my friend Bill. This somewhat surprised me, for none of my friends even WOKE UP until the middle of the day and didn’t really possess a clear voice or coherent thoughts until later on in the evening. Bill cleared up why he was calling at what would otherwise be an ungodly hour for him: he and our friend Brian were getting ready to leave Atlantic City, where they had spent the past few days. This excursion to the popular (meaning “only”) New Jersey hotspot was a result of both of them having a lot of money and nothing better to do.

“Dude, we’re gonna be on the news,” was his greeting.

Again, I was not prepared for this greeting. 

First of all, the only statements I’m used to my friends greeting me with over the telephone are “Wanna go to the mall?” or, simply, “Food. Now.” Also, my friends have never exactly done, or even been involved with, anything newsworthy. To them, “newsworthy” would not be something like the kickoff of World War III, but rather the announcement of a new Final Fantasy game.

“Why were you on the news?,” I asked, still not sure whether I had heard him right. Just how strong was my latest dose of Ny-Quil?

“There was some assault under the boardwalk last night and they asked us if we knew anything about it,” he explained. “We were pretty hammered last night but we kinda remembered hearing something about it so when they asked us if we knew anything we were like yeah.”

Verbatim quote. Probably. 

Next, you will witness the real, authentic reason that Bill and Brian were enthusiastic about being interviewed. This is evidenced by the fact that they began to pass the phone back and forth.

BRIAN: “Dude, I said ‘shit’ on the air.”

BILL: “Dude, Brian said ‘shit’.”

BRIAN: “I don’t think they’re gonna use that part though.”

BILL: “Brian doesn’t think they’re gonna use it on TV.”

BRIAN: “Hey, wanna go to the mall when we get back?”

And so on. They finally got around to the part where they requested that I record the 5:00 PM news that afternoon. So I accepted, mainly because there was nothing better on at that time. Had the request interrupted my mandatory viewing of syndicated “Simpsons” episodes between 6:30 and 7:30 PM, I would have heartily declined.

At 5:00, I pressed “record” on my VCR (yet again, 2002) and sat through the obligatory opening stories of murders, fires, politicians, politicians committing murders and setting fires, etc. Finally, footage of the Atlantic City boardwalk and the sub-boardwalk sand dunes popped onto the screen. After an interview with a police officer (who managed to make an entire speech about the incident WITHOUT saying “shit”), Bill and Brian’s segment appeared.

The first clip showed them, in a city full of casinos, live entertainment, a beach, strippers, etc. standing next to a railing doing nothing…a stance that they regularly assume pretty much anywhere they go. Both stood expressionless, looking around (Bill later remarked “I did some good standing around, didn’t I?”) as the reporter narrated. The shot next cut to an interview with Brian.

“There’s not a lot of people under there…and it’s a pretty shady place at night.”

And that was it. Although there was some speculation over whether Brian’s pronunciation of “shady” sounded like “shitty,” nothing came of it. 

However, the news managed to once again do its job of entertaining two hungover suburbanites and one ill suburbanite at home with ten seconds of TV footage. We still talked about the incident…excitedly…for years.

For the record (meaning for the college professors whose classes I missed that day who might be reading this), I did not go to the mall that evening. After all, not a lot of people go there and it’s a pretty shady/shitty place at night.

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Our Eyes Were Lazed over

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by Mike Covers

I’m currently 43 years old and counting (not by choice). So far, I have spent my 40s waxing nostalgic about my 20s and plan to continue this for the remainder of them. 

When most people put on their rose-colored glasses and gaze back on their younger years before marriage, children, mortgages, Trump presidencies, etc., they usually remember the same kinds of things. Parties. Bars. Prison. My own friends and I, however, spent these years not getting drunk (all the time, anyway) and instead shooting each other with lasers.

Don’t worry: these weren’t death lasers like those used in James Bond and Short Circuit movies. The only real consequence of getting shot by these lasers was losing the game, which was usually WORSE than actual death. This all took place at Lazerworks in suburban Philadelphia, which has since closed permanently and been transformed into a sports bar (something even worse than losing the game AND death combined). Seven of us would pile into my friend Bill’s Beretta, which comfortably fit maybe 3 people. My friend Jon and their brother would occasionally agree to ride in the trunk. 

While our games usually only lasted an hour or so, one night we all took advantage of a deal that allowed us to play as much as we could between 10PM and 1AM. It took place on a Saturday night, a time frame in which approximately 98% of other people our age were busy leading social lives which require as few laser guns as possible (the other 2% were with us at Lazerworks). Nevertheless, we continued on our quest, for defeating the Red Team was far more important than, say, meeting girls.

Upon entering, our first step was…you guessed it…using the rest rooms. 

Fortunately, the facilities had some degree of cleanliness, which meant it was safe to enter them without wearing an oxygen mask. However, something struck me as odd: in a building whose main activity was completely run by and dependent on computers, the toilets had manual flush handles. Yep, there was a total lack of easy-to-use, sensor-operated automatic toilets that you find virtually anywhere else. Manual flush. It was almost as if the toilets themselves were aimed against us and our voluntary immobile lifestyles. However, we all found the strength to MANUALLY flush them and return to the lobby.

Each of us paid our $25 for the session; next, we sat around and waited for the game to start amongst a collection of arcade games, which were probably bought with the money that Bill alone spent on summer laser tag sessions. After discussing news, politics, and other topics (i.e.—which specials we were going to take advantage of at Dennys later on), we entered the Loading Area. The Loading Area is a small room in which players accessorize themselves with the laser guns and laser-sensitive vests for the upcoming game. Players are also told the instructions of the game, which most of my friends were probably able to lip-synch. 

Finally, it was time to enter The Maze.

The Maze is the heart of laser tag, the virtual battleground. It consists of a labyrinth of walls to run amongst, as well as the “Energizer” for each of the two teams, the “Base” for each team, and, of course, the “Other Energizer” for each team. The “Base” for each team is a section of “The Maze” that opposing players must “deactivate” by shooting their “lasers” at a small circle of “light” in the “ceiling.” Each player is given six lives, which can be lost if the opposing team shoots you enough. If you lose all of your lives, you must go to one of your team’s two “Energizers,” which are small portals in the wall that reproduce your lives, available shots, and chances to get killed again.

The “Energizer” was always a regular home for me and my laser gun.

Our friend Brian was the self-appointed “leader” of our team, for he was the only one psychotic enough to dye the tip of his hair green to symbolize his Green Team loyalty. I am not kidding. He explained to each of us, in deep and frightening detail, his strategy to ward off the opposing team and deactivate their “base,” with as little physical movement as possible. Once the game began, we all completely forgot the strategy, said “Screw this” to our appointed positions, and concentrated only on running around and shooting people. At least, this is what I did. Of course, this might explain why I got shot by pretty much every opposing player and needed to visit the “Energizer” more times than everyone on both teams combined. The Maze, meanwhile, was not only full of artificial smoke and music loud enough to be heard overseas, but also full of pathetic, plastic vest-coated losers running around shooting toy lasers at each other and at specified points of light in the ceiling while green-haired Brian ran around like a lunatic, trying to get the Green Team to re-assume their positions in his plan.

As the hours wore on, a total of eight games were played. My friends continually racked up scores in the thousands, while I continuously stayed in scores that regularly match January temperatures. At times we were on the Green Team, other times the Red Team, and one time on the Sit in the Lobby and Drink Pepsi Team.

As we approached the last game, the computer system actually crashed, rendering the main game as useful as DOS. Thus, we were forced to play “Vintage Laser Tag”, in which we used obsolete equipment to play. We wore vests that looked more like kitchen table placemats than huge, fearsome wads of plastic. We also used lasers that resembled department store pricing guns, thus making everyone look like a group of people randomly bar-code-scanning opponents.

In conclusion, laser tag was fun, but never play over seven games in one session, unless you are handy with a bar code reader. Also, keep in mind the cardinal rules of the game: deactivate the enemy’s “base,” re-energize as often as needed, and never, EVER, listen to Brian’s strategies.

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