• Miles O'Brien
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    English
    2719 days ago

    My wife has issues involving texture and trauma specifically at the dentist office, so I usually accompany her to appointments. So far no office has had an issue.

    One time though, she needed to have those spacers put in her teeth, and she told the dentist and hygienist that she would throw up if it was in too long, and that she WILL bite down if there’s sharp pain, so use slightly more local anesthetic than normal and wait a little longer for it to work well.

    They rushed.

    She bit.

    The moment I heard the cry of pain and felt my wife squeezing my hand super hard, I already knew what happened without having to look around anything.

    I just said “And that’s why we told you to wait longer. You were warned.”

    They were Super chill about everything, all things considered. I know I’d be pissed if I got bit by someone while doing my job, even if that job was literally their teeth.

  • @Etterra
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    2019 days ago

    You don’t need venom to have a dangerous bite.

    Proof: I once briefly dated a girl who bit rather too hard, which subsequently got infected. I was neither amused nor aroused.

  • @mycodesucks
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    10
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    19 days ago

    Username (of poster, not OP) checks out.

  • @Protoknuckles
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    919 days ago

    That’s how cats and dogs operate too, unless people take it out of them. Barking and hissing is them saying “back off or I am going to freak out!”