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Foods That Are Good For Your Teeth

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on December 29, 2011

In a previous article, Foods That Are Bad For Your Teeth, I reviewed three broad categories of foods that can be detrimental to your dental health.  These were sugars and sweeteners, low fat foods, and foods that contain white, especially bleached, flour.

With this article I would like to spend some time talking about an area that I feel receives entirely too little attention – whether by patients, or dentists, for that matter.  Possibly, this comes about for the simple reason that by the time many patients arrive at the dentist they are looking for resolution of a specific problem.  In this sense, the market has conditioned both patients and doctors into focusing upon the end-game.

This has its place and fills a need.   Patients who are in pain do not generally want to hear about what they should be eating – they want to handle their pain.   Yet, knowing what foods can repair teeth may be a key element in establishing their future long-term dental stability.

In today’s economic climate, health care has undergone many challenges and the consumer has been faced with high medical and dental costs.  Consequently, health care is not infrequently reserved for the handling of emergencies.  This is actually counter-productive, as emergency dental care is also expensive.  Couple this with efforts by the patient to reduce costs, and the “treatment” may be a decision to remove the offending tooth.  Later, when the patient starts to regret his choice and seeks tooth replacements, he may find that replacement costs are many times more than had they handled the problem once discovered.

Economics can also influence the quality of the food we consume.  In an effort to save money many consumers will also select lowest cost items.  These are typically quite profitable for the producer but are usually highly processed and very unprofitable for your health.

So what do you need to know?

Let’s start with this simple concept:  If what you eat comes out of a box, a jar, a can, or a plastic wrapper, it has been processed.

Your diet is the single most important thing that you can control to create or maintain a healthy mouth.  When you eat too many processed foods – especially those that contain sugars and bleached flour – you create effects that may not be immediately noticed by you.  For example, the level of blood sugar can become elevated and with it a person can experience elevated cortisol.  Cortisol is a hormone produced by your adrenal gland and is responsible for raising blood sugar.   It also affects the flow of parotin (a salivary gland hormone) and, in so doing, can lead to cavities.  Cortisol also counteracts insulin which regulates carbohydrate and fat metabolism in the body, and it slows down bone formation.

The inability to metabolize fats, in turn, can keep you from benefiting from the healthy foods that can help you to repair your teeth.

So, you see, it is a little like the children’s song “The foot bone’s connected to the ankle bone.  And the ankle bone’s connected the leg bone.”  The bottom line: what we do – or don’t do – can have unseen and unwanted effects when it comes to our diet and teeth.

Maintaining healthy hormones is very important to your dental health as well as to your general health.  The relationship between demineralization and remineralization is balanced when hormones are healthy.  When unbalanced, calcium and phosphorus can be pulled out of the blood and create deficiencies in our bones as well as the teeth.  It can also create a condition wherein your body becomes excessively acidic. An acid environment is more receptive to the growth of bacteria and fungi.   If there is one take-home message that you take out of this article it should be that real food – namely unprocessed food, as nature intended that it be consumed – will not only support your general health, but will also support your teeth.

What foods, then, are good for your teeth?

  1.  Proteins:  Eat proteins in order to regulate blood sugar.  As mentioned above, blood sugar fluctuations are one of the key reasons that we lose minerals.  High quality proteins such as grass fed, or wild game are best.  While I realize that this may pose a problem for vegetarians, it doesn’t alter the fact that the most productive stores of minerals, protein, and fats are derived from meats.  Vegetarians must rely on eggs and cheese for their protein.
  2. Foods with phosphorus:  Possibly more important than calcium for your teeth, phosphorus can be obtained from milk and cheese.  Raw, unpasteurized milk is best.   Unless, strictly vegan, vegetarians should have no trouble getting their phosphorus from these sources.  Other good sources of phosphorus include organ meats of both land animals and those from the sea.  Muscle meats (most common meats consumed, i.e., not from organs such as liver or kidney, for example) are also a good source, as are beans and nuts.  Organ meats have more phosphorus than muscle meats.  Although present in some grains, the quantities can be insufficient or difficult to absorb, and this may not be the best choice for your teeth.
  3. Trace minerals are important:  In addition to phosphorus, the following deficiencies can also lead to problems with tooth decay – iron, copper, magnesium and manganese.  Foods with iron include shellfish and organ meats.  Copper is found in liver and mollusks.  Smaller amounts exist in mushrooms.  Magnesium can be found in fish, nuts, and spinach.  Manganese, also important in the regulation of blood sugar, occurs in liver, kidneys (organ meats), mussels, nuts, and pineapple, to name a few sources.  Other trace minerals may also play a role, but are too numerous to mention here.
  4. Healthy fats: These are a great source of energy, but are also important to help maintain hormonal function and balance.  Among the healthy fats are olive oil, butter, beef, chicken, pork and duck fat.  Avocado and coconut oil are also healthy fats, especially if from organic sources.  Vegetable fats do not generally contain the vitamins that help to re-build our teeth.
  5. Fat soluble vitamins D and A: Simply put, without adequate stores of these two vitamins, we can’t get the calcium and phosphorus into our bones or teeth.  People with tooth decay are typically lacking these two vitamins.  Seafood is an excellent source of Vitamin D.  If you don’t have easy access to seafood, or if you don’t like it, lard, or pork fat, will help. Suet, or beef fat appears to be more effective, however.  Another excellent (and relatively simple) way to get Vitamin D is with daily exposure to sunlight.  Consuming fermented cod liver oil is still another easy way to get Vitamin D into your diet.

Eating healthy is the single-most effective action you can take to protect your teeth – and your overall health.  It is also one thing that you can control.  Take the time to learn which foods can provide you with proteins, phosphorus, healthy fats, vitamins D and A, as well as trace minerals, and you will be well on your way to healthier teeth and gums!

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in blood sugar, Cheese, coconut oil, cod liver oil, Dr. Richard Walicki, farm fresh, grass fed beef, gums, health, lard, Nutrition, oral health, pasteurization, ProBiotics, processed food, raw milk, real food, sugar, Vitamin D | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Foods That Are Bad For Your Teeth

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on December 28, 2011

This is the first of a two-part series that discusses the effect of foods on our teeth.  Part One will review those foods considered harmful to the teeth, and Part Two will discuss foods that can actually help to rebuild them.

Generally, more attention is given to the former than the latter.  From a viewpoint of prevention, this has its value.  Nevertheless, a good understanding of which foods are beneficial to dental health is, in my opinion, of no lesser importance.  In actual fact, this understanding may hold the key to not only improving an individual’s dental health, but very possibly their general health as well.

While there are usually several components to any program that leads to improved dental health, of these, it is my opinion that diet is paramount.

Dentists generally spend the bulk of their time discussing the importance of hygiene.  I, too, have addressed this topic in several articles.  Nevertheless, over time, I have come to see the value of spending a great deal more time with patients reviewing and modifying their diets.  Truthfully, this is more challenging – and meets with greater resistance.  But it is vitally important.

I don’t think it is important to the exclusion of hygiene, however.  Yet, I have come across some opinions that promote diet only.  So let’s take another look at this area more broadly, just to put it into perspective.

Hygiene involves care of the entire body.  Naturally, that includes the mouth.  While good personal hygiene is generally something one should practice for themselves – it is also important to insist others maintain it as well.  Consider the following example:

Let’s say you have adopted a diet of fresh organic food and you are now on your way to your local butcher to purchase some fresh meat.  You arrive and are greeted by someone who smells as though he hasn’t bathed in a week.  His hair is greasy.  His hands are dirty and after he unceremoniously coughs into them, he wipes one hand on a dirty shirt.   Then he reaches over for your fresh cut of meat and holds it up for inspection.

You would have a right to refuse it.  Not because there is anything wrong with grass-fed, hormone free meat.  Rather, it would be because the person clearly practices poor hygiene and may infect you – and whoever else they come into contact with.  You wouldn’t be wrong to say something about it.

Similarly, good oral hygiene is simply a reflection of the total care of one’s body.  This also means getting sufficient rest and exercising regularly.

That having been said, let’s take a quick look at what types of food cause people dental problems.

These can be simplified into three broad categories.  As you will see, however, they comprise a very wide array of commonly consumed foods.

  1. Sugar and Sweeteners.  The first category I will mention is the one nearly everyone focuses upon and possibly falls into the category of “common knowledge.”  Despite this fact, you might be surprised by the quantities of sugars and sweeteners that are regularly consumed in a typical diet.  When the quantity of sugar in the blood rises it upsets the balance of calcium to phosphorus in the blood as well.  This has the effect of pulling calcium out of our teeth and bones.  Low phosphorus levels likewise affect the mineral content of dentin, which is the layer of tooth structure supporting tooth enamel.
  2. Low Fat Foods. This includes such items as skimmed or low-fat milk, which many individuals assume helps their teeth if they consume it in sufficient quantities.  Unfortunately, this is a fallacy that gets many people in trouble. Milk that is homogenized and pasteurized has been stripped of its nutritive value.  Pasteurization kills off the probiotic (good bacteria) quality of raw natural milk.  Paradoxically, this can allow pathogenic (bad) bacteria to grow more easily in pasteurized milk.  Also, the absence of healthy fat can affect hormonal function which, in turn, may affect mineral levels adversely.
  3. Bleached (White) Flour.  Products that contain white flour can also be damaging to teeth – especially when combined with sugars and in the absence of healthy animal fats.  If one stops to consider how many foods are made with white flour, this can create quite a dietary challenge.  Furthermore, if not removed after meals, these foods will create a thin sticky layer of what is basically a form of sugar.  Because this, in turn, can stick to the teeth for hours – and becomes acidic – it can accelerate that demineralization process that breaks down the outer layer of your teeth, resulting in tooth decay.  Also, the bleaching process typically adds chlorine dioxide or benzoyl peroxide to make the flour appear bright white.   You don’t need these in your diet.

In the next article, we will cover what foods are good for your teeth.  The positive side to this story is that there is good news and you can do something to remineralize or rebuild your teeth; however, knowing how foods come into the picture and which ones are detrimental to your teeth and gums is a critical element for taking control of your dental health.

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in blood sugar, Dr. Richard Walicki, gums, health, low fat dairy, Nutrition, oral health, Uncategorized | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

Looking For Work? Fix Your Teeth

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on October 30, 2011

Bad teeth may not only have negative consequences for your health, they can cost you a job.

Many people with visibly unattractive teeth go through life avoiding eye contact with strangers for fear of having to smile back or even to make small talk. Not infrequently, when such people do talk or feel compelled to smile, they cover their mouths with their hand.

Unfortunately, in a job interview, this will not go over well. Yet, for the person with dental problems, to smile or talk would compel them to reveal something they are deeply embarrassed about – their teeth. There is an old saying that you don’t get a second chance to make a first impression. And first impressions are typically based upon appearance. Your teeth, or even your breath, can either enhance or completely destroy your chances of landing that new position.

Teeth that are blackened by decay, are crooked, discolored, or even missing may not just be embarrassing – they may turn off prospective employers. Also, hiding your smile during an interview can be one of the worst things you do. A smile and a confident response project self-assurance and make a person appear likeable.

This is just one of many subtleties employers may take into account when interviewing a prospect. Teeth that are stained by coffee, tea or cigarettes may distract the interviewer from what is really important – you and your qualifications.

Likewise, coffee and cigarettes leave a smell that can be easily detected. Apart from not showing visible stains, a prospective job-seeker should also avoid certain other foods shortly before their interview. The most obvious offenders are garlic, onions, anchovies or tuna. But it is also prudent to steer clear of such lunch meats such as salami, pepperoni or pastrami before your interview. Strong cheeses, such as Roquefort, Camembert, or Bleu cheese also leave persisting odors and, similarly, should be avoided.

Women are cautioned to avoid getting lipstick on their teeth. Softer shades or lip gloss are preferable to bright red. Lipstick on your teeth can give you the appearance of being careless or hurried – which may also sink your prospects the moment you open your mouth to speak.

In today’s economy, competition for work is fierce. Applicants need every advantage they can get to land the job. Applicants’ teeth need to be as good looking as the way they dress, comb their hair, or even shine their shoes, because employers can afford to be selective with so many qualified people looking for work.

Recent research conducted in the U.S. estimates that those prospects with well-maintained teeth experience as much as a 58% higher chance of finding a job than those whose teeth are perceived as unattractive. It also seems that potential employees who have invested in dental treatment with cosmetic dentistry are regarded as more professional, congenial, and trustworthy.

Individuals seeking employment can increase their chances of getting work by taking several steps before their interview. These include getting a dental examination, completing unfinished restorative work and possibly even having cosmetic dentistry. The number of job seekers getting their teeth whitened and getting porcelain veneers placed (as a way to increase their chances of hiring success) is increasing for these very reasons. So what do you do if you can’t afford a Hollywood smile? Don’t worry, there are affordable answers.

If you need a lot of work and it is out of your reach, temporary cosmetic solutions such as a Snap-On Smile® can make a dramatic change in your appearance – very often at less than one quarter the cost of a more permanent solution. This is on the order of a functional, but temporary, smile design that snaps over your natural teeth. Once you land the job and start making an income, you can consider something more permanent!

Posted in Dr. Richard Walicki, health, oral health | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

8 Reasons Raw Foodies Are Dangerous Extremists (Satire)

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on October 4, 2011

I enjoy a good piece of satire.  Here is one I think many LiberationWellness Blog readers may appreciate:

by
Eric Blair
Activist Post

This week, the United States government, working closely with local authorities, heroically raided and arrested raw-food terror kingpin James Stewart in Venice, California. Stewart, who runs the private healthfood cartel, Rawesome Foods, “posed a major threat to the establishment,” claimed an unnamed but armed, undercover double-agent involved in the arrest.

After two SWAT-style stings in one year, Stewart now faces several felony charges including: conspiracy to sell milk to minors; conspiracy to operate a private club without paying protection money to the authorities; conspiracy to educate the masses; and conspiracy to make people healthy and independent.

The authorities warn that the news of Stewart’s arrest and pending environmental tribunal may awaken his cult of followers, called foodies. These extremists typically come from the political left, once believing that boisterous regulations were actually for the public’s safety. They are generally a peace-loving group, but with their bright smiles, chiseled bodies and fully-functional minds, they may prove to be a formidable threat in the war of ideas against the establishment. These foodies, hopped up on natural vitamins, minerals and antioxidants, no longer believe the FDA or the government is there to protect them. For our safety, such nonconformity must not be tolerated.

The establishment must do everything it can to make an example of Stewart and his accomplices before the contagion of natural health awareness spreads to critical mass. Food choice is a privilege that must be fully enforced with more firearms and badges in order to maintain the corporate-government monopoly over food. Anyone who demands food freedom should be considered a threat — not just to themselves, but to society as a whole. And like animals backed into a corner, foodies who lose their rights should be considered dangerous extremists and monitored like al-Qaeda.

“Without the corporate-state food monopoly, we would all starve,” warned Michael Taylor, former Monsanto executive and current head of the FDA food safety division. He added, “Therefore, these foodies are a direct threat to national and international security, and their freedom must be smoked out. You’re either with us or against us.”

Furthermore, so-called natural health experts challenging the State’s health recommendations should be taken to re-education camps, or have their assets seized for intent to commit crimes against humanity. Likewise, normal citizens growing food for neighborly trade should face felony charges of “intent to sell.” The loss of food freedom is a small price to pay for the safety and rule by the genetically modified majority.

Here are eight reasons why raw foods should be illegal, and foodies should peacefully give up their rights:

1. Big Brother knows best: Citizens aren’t smart enough to make proper health choices. That’s why they gave their rights and authority over to the State in the first place. The FDA protects them from their neighbor’s eggs that come from chickens that eat bugs and worms, not the genetically-approved feed. Gross!

2. Amish farmers have pitchforks: Given the sordid history of peasants fighting their masters with pitchforks, Amish farmers should be considered armed and dangerous if a food revolution takes root.

3. Health Effects: Raw milk, like many other raw foods, is a “superfood,” loaded with vital antioxidants. Healthy food makes strong independent humans who are difficult to control.

4. Economic Threat: The sick-care industry is about 20% of the U.S. economy. Big Ag and Big Pharma are utterly dependent on keeping the public away from healthy foods. Supporting underground organic food cartels is a risk to economic recovery.

5. BGH and GMO: Bovine Growth Hormone and GMO-fed milk creates more patients for Big Pharma than grass-fed raw milk. Dairy farmers that use BGH and subsidized GM feed maximize profits the American way. Natural dairy farmers hate technology and advancement.

6. Contagion: If more people are allowed to discover the benefits of raw milk, they may get addicted to other natural health foods and remedies not offered by central controllers. As such, raw milk should be treated as a gateway food.

7. Black Markets: Some food cooperatives operate as private clubs, or through barter systems. In other words, they operate outside of the reach of the corporate government. This is a shadowy world where illegal currencies are traded and tax revenues are difficult to extort for the public good.

8. Regulators: The staff of the FDA and CDC are people too. They need to pay mortgages and put processed food on the table. They wouldn’t have such a generous budget without taking away the rights of small farmers and foodies. Naturally, this angers foodies and may cause them to revolt.

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in big pharma, Dr. Richard Walicki, farm fresh, FDA, Food freedom, fresh and local, gmo, government, liberation wellness, Politics, processed food, raw milk, real food, real foods, Uncategorized, Vitamin D | Leave a Comment »

Is There Such A Thing As A Good Sugar?

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on October 1, 2011

What if a person could reduce tooth decay by 25%?  That would be pretty good.  Don’t you think?

How about if YOU could suffer 40% fewer cavities?  Would that get your attention? 

Dentists have been tackling the tooth decay problem for decades.  There have been many theories and various approaches.  These range from focusing upon home care, to controlling dietary factors, to using chemical agents such as chlorhexidine and fluoride.

Most of us would agree – a 25% to 40% reduction in tooth decay would be desirable.  But, what if – and without too much effort – a mother could see her five year old child reduce their tooth decay by as much as 70%?  (This reduction is compared to children given a fluoride or chlorhexidine varnish.)

Simply put, that is a BIG deal.

Still other studies have shown that mothers who did this two to three times a day, starting three months after delivery and until their child was 2 years old, reduced the levels of cavity-causing bacteria in their children up to six years of age.

The secret?  The mothers were chewing xylitol gum.

What is xylitol?  It is a sugar alcohol sweetener that is naturally occurring and can be found in the fibers of various fruits and vegetables.  Most commonly, it is extracted from corn husks and birch.  It is both tooth-friendly and diabetic friendly.

What makes it so special?  Unlike sucrose, or common table sugar, xylitol, does not ferment – a process which results in acid formation that breaks down tooth enamel.  To the contrary, the organic structure of xylitol allows it to help remineralize enamel before decay has time to form.  Saliva containing xylitol is also more alkaline than saliva exposed to some other sweeteners, so is not as likely to produce decay.  Additionally it has other chemical properties that help to remineralize the teeth.   Studies conducted in Finland in the 1970s showed that people who chewed sucrose gum had nearly three decayed, missing, or filled teeth, compared to roughly one such tooth in a group chewing xylitol gum.

Xylitol also has a more specific anti-bacterial action which could also be responsible for controlling tooth decay.  It is known to inhibit the Streptococcus mutans group of bacteria, which are significant contributors to the process which results in cavities.  Because it also inhibits Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Haemophilus influenzae on nose and throat cells, it can also be used as a nasal spray.

The FDA permits xylitol to be marketed as a product which does not promote tooth decay.

Are there any risks?  While there is no known toxicity to xylitol in humans, if taken beyond a person’s individual threshold for this type of sugar alcohol, temporary gastrointestinal (GI) side-effects such as bloating, gas, and diarrhea can occur.

Generally, these effects diminish and a person’s threshold for xylitol use without the laxative or GI effect increases over time.

An important note for dog lovers:  dogs that have consumed high levels of xylitol (greater than 100 mg per kilogram of body weight) experienced drops in blood sugar that could be life-threatening.  Very high levels (500 to 1000 mg per kilogram of body weight) have also been tied to liver failure in dogs.  Xylitol does not appear to have the same effect on cats, and it has also been acknowledged as capable of reducing plaque and tartar in cats when added to their water.

Xylitol is available in toothpastes, mouthwashes, nasal spray, chocolates, jams, lollipops, and in granular form.  When used as a sugar substitute it is typically used in the same ratio as one might use table sugar.  It also tastes like sugar, but without the aftertaste associated with many other artificial sweeteners.

Where you get your xylitol may be an additional risk factor, however.  Some readers may be familiar with a recent (FDA) warning to consumers to throw out all toothpaste made in China after the agency found a poison commonly used in anti-freeze in the toothpaste it evaluated in three U.S. cities.  Unfortunately, there have been similar concerns about Chinese xylitol.

If buying from a domestic distributor, you may want to check the source of the xylitol.  Also check to make sure your “xylitol” gum isn’t mixed with aspartame, a potentially dangerous sweetener with many reported side effects including memory loss, brain lesions, and multiple sclerosis to name just a few.

So how much xylitol do you need to consume to get cavity-fighting benefits?  Most studies suggest about six grams are needed in order to get a result.  That translates to roughly twelve pieces of gum a day.

Hmmm.  Several hours in the dental chair or chew gum six times a day?  You decide.

 

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in blood sugar, diabetes, Dr. Richard Walicki, health, sugar, xylitol | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

The Power of a Smile

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on September 4, 2011

I’m in the smile business. I can take an ugly smile and, in most cases, make it a very attractive one. Sometimes it’s something simple. At other times it’s not. Often, it depends upon how much I have to change to get there, as well as what people, themselves, are willing to do toward an end.

But the smiles I really care about the most are those that start on the inside.

Sure, I treat diseases. I also repair things that are broken down, replace things that are missing, prevent things that shouldn’t happen from happening, and more. It’s all part of the job. But at the end of the day, the thing I value the most are the smiles.

In today’s day and age, it seems that people are so focused upon the problems around them; they find it harder and harder to find the smile within them. After all, the media works hard to put our attention on earthquakes, hurricanes, flooding, unemployment, inflation, recession, terrorist attacks, famine, wars – and that’s just before breakfast. Who the heck wants to smile after that?

It’s really enough to make someone want to give up, to lose hope, or maybe even feel sorry for themselves. I sometimes think that’s actually the point: to beat us down. If we are all depressed, maybe they can sell us happiness in the form of something material thing, or package it in a pill. Maybe Madonna was right when she sang “Material World” after all.

So what can we do about it?

Start with a smile.

If it doesn’t feel natural, go ahead and force yourself. It actually takes courage to smile in the face of adversity, but that resolve is one thing no one can take away from you. It is also the gift you can give to another that costs you nothing – yet it will be cherished long after you have given it.

A smile is powerful because it emanates from you and when given genuinely, is truly valued.

Over the years I have accomplished many things both within my immediate profession and outside of it. People have paid me good money to help them with their problems but, when the time comes to hang up my dental handpiece, I know that it won’t be the dollars that mattered most or that I am even likely to remember. It will be the six year-old who came back and gave me a hug after I finished her filling, or drew me a picture. It will be the young man who made a special trip back to my office one evening, just to take me aside and say “Thank you. You don’t know how much fixing my smile has helped my self-esteem.” It will be the young lady who gasped, and finally took her hand away from her mouth (after always covering it up), when I showed her her new smile. Okay, she cried, but she was really happy. That made me happy too. And so I smiled. In fact, when I think about those moments I still smile.

Smiling and kindness are the two “secret” weapons we have to battle the insanity surrounding us. I say, let’s use them as weapons of mass destruction. If destruction is to be the order of the day, then let’s destroy the pessimism, the fear, the cynicism, and the hatred. Think of it as a form of biological warfare. Wouldn’t it be great if smiling and kindness went viral?

If you are starting to think, “Oh, that sounds great, but it’s a little naïve,” then maybe the “Dark Side” is winning. I don’t think happiness is at all sentimental or corny. It is the pay we get for living.

People search for happiness their entire lives. Yet, someone much wiser than I once stated that all the happiness you will ever find lies within you. So why not start with a smile?

I hope you enjoy the following video. May it make you smile. :-) If it does, why not send it to a few friends?

Smile

Smile though your heart is aching
Smile even though it’s breaking
When there are clouds in the sky, you’ll get by
If you smile through your fear and sorrow
Smile and maybe tomorrow
You’ll see the sun come shining through for you

Light up your face with gladness
Hide every trace of sadness
Although a tear may be ever so near
That’s the time you must keep on trying
Smile, what’s the use of crying?
You’ll find that life is still worthwhile
If you just smile

That’s the time you must keep on trying
Smile, what’s the use of crying?
You’ll find that life is still worthwhile
If you just smile

(Music by Charlie Chaplin; lyrics by John Turner and Geoffrey parsons; sung by Michael Jackson)

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in Dr. Richard Walicki, Fear | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

The Erosion of Freedom

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on August 13, 2011

A chiropractor friend of mine recently called my attention to an article he found on Natural News.com.  It describes how Detroit mother Maryanne Godboldo was found to be guilty of neglect for refusing to medicate her daughter with psychiatric drugs.  Is it really coming to this in America?

Click on the photo below for a link to the article:

Whatever happened to the Fourth Amendment and the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects?

What security of self is there in mandating that one’s children be forcibly drugged by the state?  Have people really become so blinded that they believe forcible mind-altering drugging is actually in the best interest of the child?

Making a stand against law enforcement officials can never be expected to go well.   Evidently, this is what Maryanne Godboldo is accused of – and which, no doubt, compounded her troubles.  Yet it is not so hard to understand a mother’s instinct to fiercely protect her young.  We can see multiple examples of this in nature and no one questions it, as it is Natural law.

Yet Man’s law would appear to mandate that when faced with a direct threat to our person, our mind, and even our spirit, we have little recourse.  I believe, conversely, that we can always do something.  If little else, we must remain aware, vigilant, and be prepared to speak out against such injustices.

The Ninth Amendment to the Constitution reminds us that “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”

Be neither denied nor disparaged.  Know and defend your rights.

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The Basics of Dental Care

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on August 7, 2011

In almost any field there are basics, the fundamental facts or principles from which other truths can be derived.

Without an understanding of these basics we lack the building blocks for greater knowledge or competence.  For example, before we can write we learn our ABCs.   Geometry first requires an understanding of arithmetic, and so on.

Lacking these basics, we can become lost in a sea of information, lacking the correct drops of water that hold the answers to our questions or allow us to be effective.

Know the basics of automotive care and you are likely to have a car that runs well and needs few repairs.   Understand the basics of grammar and you can communicate.

What, then, are the basics of dental care?

While there are several key concepts which I cover in some of my earlier articles, there is one often overlooked principle I want to briefly cover herein.

Let’s first assume you are already in good dental health or, perhaps you weren’t, but now you got things under control.  You are starting off with a “clean slate.”  So, what do you do now?

The simple answer is taking a look at what got you there.

You spent months and maybe hundreds, even thousands, of dollars to handle dental problems that may not even have been causing you pain.  Things feel good and you have gotten the clean bill of dental health from your doctor.  What now?  Continue to do what fixed the problem.

  • Did you start brushing after meals?  Good.  Continue.
  • Did you change your diet to reduce refined carbohydrates?  Good.  Continue.
  • Do you floss every day?  Good.  Continue.
  • Do you come back for your regular visits?  No?!  Why not?

If that was a successful part of the formula, don’t make the mistake I see so many people commit.  There is probably many a dentist who will vouch for the fact that patients come in to them and say:  “Yeah, I had a bunch of dental work done somewhere about fifteen years ago and it is starting to come apart.”  When asked about the time of their last dental visit:  “Oh, it was around then.  Since my teeth were fine, it didn’t see the point of going in for a dental visit.”

Didn’t see – that’s a key point.  There are many conditions that the patient neither sees nor feels.  More importantly, dental health has a direct relationship to overall health.  So the fact that one doesn’t feel gum disease, bone loss, dental cavities or oral cancer – especially in the early stages is a poor excuse not to see your dentist.  Regular checkups are fundamental to defending yourself against serious problems.  Caught early, your treatment can be approached conservatively, saving you time in the dental chair, the potential discomfort of extensive work and, of course, money.

Why is it that patients who visit the dentist regularly seem to need less dental work?  I’d like to think it also has to do with their increased care and effort – but that effort includes keeping up with regular visits.  These checkups can prevent small problems from turning into big ones and help to keep your existing work in good shape.  Don’t be a penny wise and a pound foolish.  See your dentist at least twice a year.

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How Often Should I Brush My Teeth?

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on July 11, 2011

Sounds like a pretty basic question for a dentist, doesn’t it? In fact, I’m not really asked that question often because “everybody knows” you should brush your teeth twice a day. But should you really?

After all, you can pick up almost any tube of toothpaste and it says right there” brush twice daily, or as directed by your dentist”.

Some time ago, I started asking patients how often they brushed their teeth when they came in for their periodic cleanings. The most common answer – by far – is “twice a day.” My next question is usually, “Yes, but when during the day do you brush?” As you read this, many of you who do brush twice daily are thinking “when I get up and again before I go to bed.”

If you have experienced dental cavities, that could be part of the problem.

When I mention this to patients I usually get this sort of silent stare. It’s kind of a cross between, “well that makes no sense at all” or, “then I might as well just give up.”

Let me explain.

It starts with an understanding of what causes dental cavities. There are a few basic elements. The most obvious is that you need to have a tooth. Additionally, you need cavity-causing bacteria. Then you also need a fermentable carbohydrate. This is an important point. Carbohydrates include sugars and starches, but the process of fermentation creates acids. Once the acids form, there is another element that comes into play: time.

If we break these factors down further, it is useful to look at what we can control in the cavity-causing process. For the sake of argument, let’s assume we are starting out with a full set of teeth, so that’s not entirely in our control. Next, there is the factor of cavity-causing bacteria. We all have both good and bad bacteria in our mouths. While I could get into a discussion of promoting the good and suppressing the bad, this is also not always easily controlled.

The next two factors, however, we have a great deal of control over.

We can control what we eat. Recognition of which foods are acid forming is also useful. But I’m a realist and understand that sometimes we are just going to eat (or drink) those things anyway.

And this is where the time factor comes in.

A little analogy may be helpful here. What would you do if you spilled a strong acid on your bare skin? Chances are you would run right over to the nearest sink and try to wash it off. But what if you had a leather jacket on and didn’t notice right away? First of all, you would end up with a hole in your jacket, but eventually – with time – it would reach your skin and start to hurt.

It’s much the same with teeth. Your enamel is a protective layer that doesn’t have any feeling because it is mostly mineral and doesn’t contain any nerves. But given enough time, the acid – even a weak one – breaks through and gets to the underlying softer and more sensitive areas.

So, don’t give it time.

Change your brushing habits and do so after every meal. About a half hour after eating is ideal. If you absolutely can’t brush on occasion, chewing a sugarless gum (preferably containing xylitol) can help.

What most people do, though, is wake up and brush. Then they have breakfast and don’t brush. The acids that are formed following the meal slowly dissolve our tooth enamel. Roughly when the acids wear off, they have another meal or a snack and freshen up the acid. Few people brush after lunch, so it’s a few more hours of wearing the enamel away. Just when that acid wears off people freshen it up again with dinner. They don’t always brush after dinner either, so the acid now has even more time to work. Finally, they brush before going to bed. This cycle can, and typically does, go on for days, weeks, months and years. Given enough time, the cavity becomes large enough to require a filling.

So, if you only eat two meals a day, brushing twice a day is probably fine. But if you eat three times a day, how often should you brush? You get the idea.

The really odd thing is that I can go over this with someone thinking they get it. A couple of years later, I’ll ask: “How often do you brush your teeth?” Believe it or not, the answer is often the same as when I asked the first time. Hopefully, however, you will get it. Remember also that you can’t ignore flossing and expect to escape cavities, even if you do brush after every meal. The area between your teeth can’t be reached by the toothbrush bristles. About a third of all cavities filled by dentists occur in this location.

Nevertheless, if you follow the advice above I think you will find yourself encountering far less tooth decay over the years. Hoping it works for you as well as it has for me.

Posted in Dr. Richard Walicki, health, oral health, Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments »

Cavities – Important Information

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on June 27, 2011

Probably one of the most common dental misconceptions revolves around the idea that in order for a tooth to have a problem it has to hurt. Certainly, if a tooth is aching, we can agree that there is most definitely something wrong. But can a tooth have a cavity and not hurt you? If so, should this still be a cause for concern?

Watch this short video to learn how this situation may have something to do with you.

Posted in Dr. Richard Walicki, oral health | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

 
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