To be sold eventually to strangers, 8

121913

One.
The first thing I noticed, nearly, when I started cleaning out my dad’s house was the huge number of toothpicks lying about. On the breakfast table. On the metal tray where he kept the toaster. On the lamp table beside his TV chair. By the sink. Next to his computer. On the nightstand. On the lavatory. On the kitchen counter. In the junk drawer in the kitchen. On top of the clothes dryer. Next to his briefcase.

I don’t think he’d thrown away a toothpick in years.

Where he lives now, in an assisted living center, I don’t think he has toothpicks in his room.

I wonder if he misses them.

Two.
My dad wore braces on his teeth when he was a kid. He’s 90 now, so he was a kid a very long time ago. And it wasn’t like he lived in a city, where even in those early days of orthodontia, braces would have been easy to obtain: he lived in a small town in the Texas panhandle.

His teeth are crooked again now, having found their way back, over the decades, to the places in his jaw where they started out.

Three.
My mom was always self-conscious about her teeth, which were very crooked. She finally got braces, as an adult, and seemed to smile a lot more once her teeth looked better.

Four.
I wore braces twice. Once for six years, spanning all of junior high and a good part of high school.

Then, I got them again about 15 years ago, and wore them for a little more than a year.

I was a much more compliant patient when I was paying for the braces myself.

Five.
I dream about teeth. Broken teeth, mostly. Broken teeth like shards of glass in my mouth. Broken teeth that I keep spitting out, over and over; there’s never an end to these tooth-shards. I often have vivid dreams, but this is the only one that recurs. What in the world? Well, the Dream Encyclopedia* has this to say regarding the symbology of dreams about teeth:

Loosing the teeth may reflect a loss of power as well as a grasp of life circumstances.

I suppose I concur with that assessment. The past year and a little more has been a time of great upheaval, a time when I often felt as though my grasp of things was slipping. But I try to remember that no matter how much upheaval I’ve felt and had to deal with, it is a tiny drop compared to what my dad has gone through. In a short period, he went from owning a home full of his life’s possessions and living on his own and on his own terms, to holding a couple of checks after the house and its contents sold. Everything he owns now is compressed down to what fits into that efficiency apartment, and he has to ask me to run his errands.

He’s never asked for toothpicks.

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 8.23.2013

*The Dream Encyclopedia, James R. Lewis

Posted on December 19, 2013, in Photography and tagged , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 8 Comments.

  1. I have the tooth spitting dream too, I usually wake up to a completely dry mouth and I just figured it was my sleeping self trying to work up some spit.

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  2. My uncle Mike had the same thing with toothpicks. I never saw him without one in his mouth and there was always a fresh one at arms length. He gave up smoking and substituted toothpicks. I don’t know if your father smoked but I’m told when you drop an old habit you pick up a new one.
    I don’t make much of dream interpretations since they are very subjective and can’t be proven. There is no science behind it but on the other hand I believe that if you believe something that is not true it is true for you.

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    • My dad was never a smoker. He’s just not all that tidy, I guess.

      I don’t necessarily put stock in dream interpretations, but it was interesting to read the broken-teeth interpretation. Or, if you prefer “interpretation.” Mostly the interpretations in the book are about as broad as horoscopes or fortunes inside cookies: they are so broad as to be fairly applicable in nearly any situation.

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  3. Always find your “Eventually to be…” very moving. Usually I try and avoid these “places”, but I’ve let myself go there with these. I also have the broken teeth dream, I just though it was my fear of dentists lol, and also a horror movie called “The Dentist”, of which I watched the first 5 minutes of before turning it off in, well, horror. I do think about eating things like apples with razor blades in them sometimes, not sure if that’s along the same lines?! Although that’s when I’m about to fall asleep, halfway zone, and I never actually bite down on it, I always find out, quite silly, but there ‘yar!

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    • Thank you for your kind comments on this series. Going through my dad’s house has been en emotional time, and I didn’t know what else to do but take a lot of photos; the writing came a little later. I’ve been gratified with the response these pieces have generated, and it helps me to know that I’m not in this alone!

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  4. Hi Melinda – this is a very good photo even without the words. It says a lot, is very dated in content (not only the jar, but also the hinges and counter top, and, well, everything) and seems to speak to forgetfulness, broken habits, forgotten corners. The words add to that impression but this photo would stand well without them.

    I am glad I don’t have that dream. Or usually remember any of them. The forgotten corners of my night-brain are most likely best neglected.

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