My Opinion | Nov 19,2022
Aground breaking practice in its early days, ”tooth jumping” was once a common toothache remedy. It was the extraction of a tooth by holding a chisel at an angle against it and striking it with a hammer for the tooth to jump out. In contrast, entirely without meaning, first mentioned centuries ago and intended to suggest infinity, ”abracadabra” is a word believed to be a charm with the power to cure toothaches, fevers, and other ills. Undoubtedly, many people would have chosen the second remedy had it had any truth to it.
The issue popped up as I sat for a chat with a childhood friend in a café. We had met earlier at a supermarket while he was buying some apples. We started conversing as I took words right out of his mouth, as he did to me, as we chalked up the virtues of apples.
The list started with the saying, ”an apple a day keeps the doctor away.” It took me a while as I struggled to explain to my friend to size the comparison between apples and oranges, as the latter is considered to have more Vitamin C, thus better contributing to immune defence.
As my friend removed his face mask to sip his coffee, I noticed an indentation on his teeth, bringing vivid images of some achy memory. My friend has always been a picture of health, a model of well-being, with complimentary nicknames describing his strength in our childhood football team. Moreover, his artisanal skill was exceptional.
I remember he had his own cobbler's tools like an awl, a knife, a cutter, spare leather, and thread. Yet, they were never complete in his unusually big pocket. Therefore, he unravelled hold-ups to urgent duties caused by the absences of the tools by using his teeth. He was a kid wonder as we marvelled at the strength of his teeth, coupled with the speed with which he used to open the cap of bottled soft drinks.
After a while, some of his molar teeth started to get wobbly with indescribable pain and discomfort. He needed help, a proper health practitioner, which did not come in as handy as these days.
In a HuffPostarticle, “Thinking Inside the Box,” Eliezer Sobel, author, recommends that healthcare services are better sought from people thinking inside the box.
“When seeking professional help,” he wrote, “find people inside the box. Especially dentists. Things outside that box can get really scary.”
As we reminiscence, my friend was never able to find people ”inside the box.” The “dentists” he used to frequent, some of the traditional practitioners, had only built a profession in pulling people’s teeth, whatever the ailment. I asked him if he remembered whether he had help from a certified dentist. He never found any back then.
I told my friend about the dentist I met three decades ago. I was lucky to “find a man inside the box.” After identifying damage that most likely happened from opening a bottle cap of a soft drink, using my teeth as an opener, as my childhood friend most of the time did, he was able to fix it relatively quickly.
But he also combined some out of the box thinking once he mastered the profession. He told me how as a student, he himself used to be shown how to handle toothbrushes. He also added that his patients' observation was people abusing their teeth either wrongly applying what they were told to do or just not following any medical advice.
The idea of thinking outside of the box seems enticing. But it is often the case that people that venture too far from the box are people that do not know what they are doing. The best adventurers, in contrast, are those that have spent a great deal of time in the box and understand exactly why they are venturing out now.
PUBLISHED ON
Nov 27,2021 [ VOL
22 , NO
1126]
My Opinion | Nov 19,2022
Radar | Sep 11,2020
My Opinion | Dec 17,2022
Commentaries | Aug 03,2019
Viewpoints | Jan 03,2021
Viewpoints | Jan 19,2024
Viewpoints | May 14,2022
Verbatim | Jun 22,2019
Commentaries | Jun 29,2024
Life Matters | Jul 22,2023
Dec 22 , 2024 . By TIZITA SHEWAFERAW
Charged with transforming colossal state-owned enterprises into modern and competitiv...
Aug 18 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Although predictable Yonas Zerihun's job in the ride-hailing service is not immune to...
Jul 28 , 2024 . By TIZITA SHEWAFERAW
Unhabitual, perhaps too many, Samuel Gebreyohannes, 38, used to occasionally enjoy a couple of beers at breakfast. However, he recently swit...
Jul 13 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Investors who rely on tractors, trucks, and field vehicles for commuting, transporting commodities, and f...
A severe cash shortage squeezes the economy, and the deposit-to-loan ratio has slumpe...
Jan 4 , 2025
Time seldom passes without prompting reflection, and the dawn of 2025 should nudge Et...
Dec 28 , 2024
On a flight between Juba and Addis Abeba, Stefan Dercon, a professor of economic poli...
Dec 21 , 2024
The main avenues and thoroughfares of Addis Abeba have undergone an impressive faceli...