@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agoLight Bulbs and Your Mouth: A Cautionary Talelemmy.sdf.orgimagemessage-square48fedilinkarrow-up1774arrow-down117
arrow-up1757arrow-down1imageLight Bulbs and Your Mouth: A Cautionary Talelemmy.sdf.org@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agomessage-square48fedilink
minus-squareradixlinkfedilink5•1 year agoWhat if you meditate or go to sleep or otherwise relax it enough to take it out? That should work if the only thing keeping it in is the involuntary stress/fear response of muscle tension.
minus-squareradixlinkfedilink3•edit-21 year agoI mean, I’ve fallen asleep at the dentist’s before. That’s the same right? To be clear, it was momentary lapses in consciousness during routine cleanings, not due to anesthesia.
What if you meditate or go to sleep or otherwise relax it enough to take it out? That should work if the only thing keeping it in is the involuntary stress/fear response of muscle tension.
Go to sleep? With a lightbulb in your mouth??
I mean, I’ve fallen asleep at the dentist’s before. That’s the same right?
To be clear, it was momentary lapses in consciousness during routine cleanings, not due to anesthesia.