Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Why one should never agree to having one's wisdom teeth pulled out

I had my widsom teeth pulled out on monday last week. My girlfriend, who's a dentist, recommended me to get them extracted, and since it's very much cheaper having it done here in Japan than in Sweden, I was foolish to believe that it actually was a good idea to get it done.

The clinic I went to (which is where my girlfriend works, but she's working under guidance from the dentist in charge since she started working as a dentist recently) actually has his own operation room. I had come from a quick walk for about 30 minutes to get to the dental clinic, on top of that already being quite nervous, so my pulses was already quite high. Arriving at the clinic I figured I'd lie on a normal dentist's chair for the extraction, so I was kind of surprised being told to put on a green shirt of the type that patients wear for a surgery, being led into an operating room and having a bunch of cables connected to my chest and a beeping pulse meter and being asked to lie down on an operating table. Lying there hearing that damn beeping of my own pulse of course made me even more nervous and the beeping became quicker and quicker.

The process itself was not too bad, just a strange experience. The dentist first started cutting away lots of meat in my mouth with a surgical knife, then taking out a small electrical saw to grind down the bone enough to be able to get a grip of the tooth. The first tooth had to be cut into two parts to be able to get extracted by some reason. At one point during the sawing I was convinced that he was actually sawing somewhere in the front of my mouth. I know that dentist are evil people, but I still found it a bit strange that he would be cutting my bone in the front of the mouth during the extraction of my wisdom teeth. Figured out after a while that due to anaesthesia, I couldn't feel at all what was going on in the back of my mouth, but my bone was vibrating from the sawing, causing it to feel exactly as if the non-anaesthesized part was being cut, just without the pain. Well, if it would be possible to get sawed in the mouth on a non-anaesthesized part without feeling pain that is.

Anyway, I can assure you that it sounds alot more nasty than it was. I had a green paper covering my face and kept my eyes closed so fortunately I didn't have to see what was going on. It was just about staying calm for the a bit more than an hour or so that it took.

What's been quite tough is the aftermath. Been waking up pretty much every morning for the first week like a soldier who wakes up on the warfield with both his legs blown off, dying for a dose of morphine. An intense pain starting from the back of my mouth and reaching out along the jawbone to the front of the mouth, a massive headache on both sides and a tense feeling in my neck. According to my girlfriend the different nerves are connected and brain nerve number 3 or some stuff like that does a good job in spreading the pain all over my head. Thanks for the info, sure helps me alot...

During the first 24 hours it made no big difference if I took painkillers or not, tried for one and a half hour to eat a bowl of soup but finally had to give up after eating half of it and went back to bed.
After withstanding the first day it actually got a bit better and the pain became quite manageable as long as I took painkillers, I'm just wondering how healthy it is to take painkillers three times per day for more than a week. My always troubled stomach has actually gotten a lot better after the teeth extraction though, so maybe I should stick to the painkillers. Or it might just be because I'm eating a lot slower and a bit less than before.
Now, a bit more than a week after the torture began, I'm actually getting better. I can survive with taking painkillers just twice per day. Still quite troublesome with washing the big holes left after the 'amputation' of my teeth and it will be like that for quite a while. Pretty big pieces of food gets stuck in there and I have this thing that looks like a syringe but without a sharp edge that I have to put into the opening of the holes to squirt in some water a few times per day, but I can live with it for a while.

So everyone, my advice is; if you're told by a dentist that you should have your wisdom teeth extracted, run! My girlfriend might not agree with me, but I am now convinced that dentists are evil sadist who loves to inflict a lot of pain on you and then take all your money. Sure, you MIGHT get caries and infections etc if you don't have your wisdom teeth pulled out, but to me it sounds like a piece of cake compared to having them pulled out.

I have to admit that it's quite cool to have your own big nice tooth in a plastic bag though, isn't it?




Finally, one should note that the text above is written after enduring a week of combined mouth, neck and headache, so if you really want to have your wisdom teeth pulled out, go ahead. Just don't come complaining to me afterwards.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

So what's up 2009?

First of all, happy new year to everyone!

So what's been up lately?

Well I've had a long winter vacation, which ends today, so from tomorrow I'm back to school.
Did a trip over the new year's holiday to Hakodate on southernmost Hokkaido, from there we continued by train, passing through the longest tunnel in the world, which connects Hokkaido and Honshu, and went to the Iwate prefecture on northern Honshu. Had a good time staying at nice ryokans (japanese style inns) and eating lots of good food.

The snow is pouring down almost everyday, as usual in Sapporo. Nobody feeling like coming over for a visit of the famous Sapporo snow festival in February and go for some skiing and hot spring bathing? It's the last chance since me and my girlfriend will be moving to Sweden by the spring. The amount of snow that falls here in Hokkaido is just incredible. The snow that falls during a whole winter in Stockholm comes pouring down about every third day here. The ski resorts here on Hokkaido are also very nice.

Currently trying to make some plans for the future; what to study when I get back to Stockholm, finding a place to live and hoping I can get back to my former job at the airport in Stockholm for the spring and summer. In other words, I have some stuff to take care of.

If anybody happens to have a sublease apartment big enough for two persons in Stockholm, preferably around the Solna/Norrtull area available from April, please let me know! I will most likely start working at Sas ground services again, so I need to stay somewhere from where I can get to Arlanda airport easily. Since I don't have a car and don't want to spend money for buying one, it pretty much restricts me to the areas where I can get on the airport bus early in the morning, which is in the city, Norrtull and Solna/Ulriksdal.

I really wouldn't mind staying longer in Japan and especially in Sapporo, it's a great place to live, but I want to study at university when I'm finished with my Japanese language studies and other than getting more practise of using the Japanese language, there's not really any good reason to study at a university in Japan. For those of you thinking about studying at a university in Japan, I'll give you my reasons:

Firstly, Japanese universities are expensive, Swedish ones are free. I'm already taking big student loans to be able to study at the language school and it would not be reasonable at all to take more loans for studying 3-4 years at a Japanese university, furthermore, due to the financial crisis the Japanese yen has become about 45% more expensive in relation to the Swedish crowns compared to half a year ago.

Secondly, there's a big difference between a good and a bad university in Japan. If you have studied at a not so famous university, you'll have a tough time finding a job afterwards. Practically all the big companies in Japan only employs graduates from universities with a good reputation. The famous universities in Japan is not very easy to enter, especially for foreigners. There's a lot of tests and examinations, both of the Japanese language and other subjects to pass to enter a university in Japan.

Thirdly, Japanese universities does in general not hold a very high level. Entering Japanese universities is often difficult, but once you manage to enter the university, the courses are not very intense. This does of course differ depending on what you study, but most of the university students in Japan appear to spend more time on part-time work than on studying. This is a well-known problem in Japan and there's a lot of debates going on on how to stop the decline of the Japanese students knowledge.

To summarize it, there's not really any good reason to spend alot of money that I don't have anyway on an education that most likely is of a lower standard than what I can get for free back in Sweden. I need to get something back for those insane taxes I've been paying while working in Sweden, you know. Also, if I study at a university in Sweden I have the possibility of studying as an exchange student in Japan. Exchange students don't have to pay any tuition fee and the Swedish universities only have agreements with the high-level universities in Japan.

My problem now is just to figure out what to study when I return to Sweden. Slightly regret that I didn't study much at all during high-school and therefore have not too good grades, but I'll apply for what seems interesting and if I can't enter I guess I'll just have to study for the university entrance test (Högskoleprovet) and give it a new try 6 or 12 months later.

In other news, I had my wisdom teeth extracted a couple of days ago at the dental clinic where my girlfriend works, the extraction itself was quite tiring and unpleasant, but thanks to anaesthesia, manageable. The pain afterwards for the first 24 hours or so was quite tough though. It's however getting alot better quickly and I hope my slightly swollen face will return to it's normal slim shape soon.

That's it for now, thanks to anyone who bothered reading this long post. If you have anything specific you want me to write about, post a comment! I've got lots of photos and stuff that I could post if anyone's interested.