Dear venus808,
I was born in 1973. I had my 2 front teeth root canaled in 1985. I went through every dental procedure available without any questions or, I thought, problems.
In 2001 I suffered hard bones and joints and couldn't hold down many foods. I ended up moving to the tropics and eating tropical fruits until I worked out the problem.
It was a complicated one, but in the end I decided to have my dead teeth removed. I'm very glad I did and all my health problems have cleared up in the last 3 years.
I'm now becoming healthier than I was before. I don't wear a partial denture, I have a gap. It doesn't bother me too much although I often consider getting a partial denture.
The natural feeling is wonderful: being myself and totally natural gives me a lot of confidence, although the odd first impression is a bit tricky.
Mostly I don't care if someone finds it strange. 9 times out of 10 it's because of the situation not the person. The toxins from the from teeth reside in the back of the knees, in the sacral vertebrae, in the back of the nose, and in the kidneys.
The longer the dead teeth are in the body the more these toxins accumulate although if a person has good posture then they don't accumulate as much.
I wish you all the best whatever you decide. I hope you don't get a dental implant. I had one and it's what pushed my system over the edge. An implant is more difficult to support than other dental work because it penetrates the bone marrow.
Since having my dead teeth out my other teeth have become stronger to and I now have no fillings even though I had them before.
I used to have a website about all this but now I'm 'better' so I don't need to yak about it as much. I only do it now because I'm considering launching a field called 'organic dentistry' or 'homeopathic dentistry'.
To understand the issue so deeply, I made a partial denture out of stone and meditated towards the elements, the sea, the sun, and the hottest girls on the dancefloor in a nightclub.
After all the thinking, I found that it didn't make a big difference because life was so adventurous and unpredictable. As I said, I wish you all the best whatever you decide.
1 last thing: I consider that tooth decay is cancer of the teeth. I've asked 16 dentists if they had filling-free teeth and not one replied with a 'yes'.
In other words, probably 95% of dentists have cancer of the teeth with cosmetic, or conventional, dental work over it. I don't. I have no fillings, 28 teeth, and I eat very well, work and sleep happily.
If you take the person's teeth into account when you ask them, you'll see that each person tells you something that reflects the way they live.
I say 'go natural' because it works for me. A dentist will say 'implant it' because that works for him. Neither is you or feels everything you feel. You're in the best position to make the decision.
Best wishes,
Sebastian Reed
sebastianreed@hotmail.com