Beat this.
1st week.
Like 5 times I get to use my herbal toothpaste.
2nd week.
Ah,.....it's almost gone! Used toothpaste for like 5 times or ....less..
3rd week.
Aww. I can't buy toothpaste kanugon ang kwrta bay! I'm just gonna buy some more food.
4rth week.
Just like 3 times i have actually used a toothpaste.
Well, I know we can buy some inexpensive toothpaste everywhere. Maybe I was just too lazy to buy a toothpaste. Or just thought that, "hey, that's not THAT important."
Besides. Back in the day people are not using toothpaste! Who needs 'em?
Then the thought came to me. People before usually have bad very bad bad breath. And some people even DIE from a TOOTHACHE! So Who NEEDS toothpaste? Maybe that is the reason why the very intelligent man found a remedy for that.
Nowadays people no longer die whenever they would have a toothache. But THAT is the worst PAIN of all the PAIN that I have gone through!
Result.
After NOT USING a toothpaste regularly;
Breath: hmmm....for me it's still okay.
Cavities: I will have some in no time. (I'm started to have a very serious sensitive teeth).
Life: Still alive... :)
Mouth condition: Probably have a great amount of those 500 microorganisms living inside my mouth.
Disgusting.
I'm a woman.
I still care.
Anyway.
Want to know about the toothpaste history? If you're too lazy to check out wikipedia or just to google it... just read this.
This came from http://www.parentingtoddlers.com/toothpaste-history.html and nope....I didn't have the permission to show this...so I'm just gonna show SOME of what has been written.
Toothpaste History
The development of toothpaste began as long ago as 300/500BC in China and India. According to Chinese history, a learned man, Huang-Ti, studied the care of teeth and claimed different types of pain felt in the mouth could be cured by sticking gold and silver needles into different parts of the jaw and gum. It was theories such as these that led to the development of dental cream.
First attempts at tooth cleaning included using abrasives such as crushed bone, crushed egg and oyster shells, which were used to clean debris from teeth. Tooth powders were the first noticeable advance and were made up of elements like powdered charcoal, powdered bark and some flavouring agents. This would be applied to teeth using a simple stick.
Toothpowder or dentifrice was first available in Britain in the late eighteenth century. It came in a ceramic pot and was available either as a powder or paste. The rich applied it with brushes and the poor with their fingers.
Modern toothpastes were developed in the 1800s. A dentist called Peabody was the first to add soap to toothpaste in 1824. Chalk was first added to toothpaste by John Harris in the 1850s. In 1873, toothpaste was first mass-produced into nice smelling toothpaste in a jar. In 1892, Dr. Washington Sheffield of Connecticut was the first to put toothpaste into a collapsible tube. Sheffield's toothpaste was called Dr. Sheffield's Creme Dentifrice. Advancements in synthetic detergents (after World War II) replaced the soap used in toothpaste with emulsifying agents such as Sodium Lauryl Sulphate and Sodium Ricinoleate.
The 1960's saw the introduction of fluoride into toothpaste. This development was followed in the 1980's with the addition of soluble calcium fluoride to fluoride toothpastes. It is therefore within the last thirty years that toothpastes contains the two ingredients - calcium and fluoride. Nowadays, there are controversial views on the effectiveness and safety of fluoride toothpaste. For those who are safety concious, the use of natural toothpaste might be a better choice.
........
back to the lazy Wammy story.
According to what you have read.
Would you still consider TOOTHPASTE necessary for our lives? Yes. I guess so. Because we made it...we actually need it!
Tip from Elder Dayes:
How to Brush your TEETH.
1. Wash your toothbrush regularly. Like disinfect it every once in a while (Like I actually DO that..hehehe)
2. Brush your teeth. (Every CORNER please, this I love to do) Brush them without toothpaste just to clean it.
3.Brush your tongue.
4.Rinse.
5. Check your toothpaste if it has Fluoride in it. Any percentage would do.
6. Put your toothpaste on the toothbrush and start to lightly brush your teeth.
7. Try not to rinse. So as that protective coat (fluoride) would still be able to work on your teeth. Our teeth need 'em. So as we will never ever experience dying out of toothache again.
8. If you want to rinse it it's ok. That is if you dont want that soapy feeling in your mouth. But don't forget to use mouthwash after rinsing instead. And never ever forget to have a mouthwash with Fluoride in it. That's more important than just the fresh breath something that those TV commercials are showing us.
Excuse my grammar.
Good luck!!!
who needs toothpaste? I mean...who needs Fluoride? who needs Cavity?
you choose....
I will have to choose to buy a toothpaste too....tsk.
1st week.
Like 5 times I get to use my herbal toothpaste.
2nd week.
Ah,.....it's almost gone! Used toothpaste for like 5 times or ....less..
3rd week.
Aww. I can't buy toothpaste kanugon ang kwrta bay! I'm just gonna buy some more food.
4rth week.
Just like 3 times i have actually used a toothpaste.
Well, I know we can buy some inexpensive toothpaste everywhere. Maybe I was just too lazy to buy a toothpaste. Or just thought that, "hey, that's not THAT important."
Besides. Back in the day people are not using toothpaste! Who needs 'em?
Then the thought came to me. People before usually have bad very bad bad breath. And some people even DIE from a TOOTHACHE! So Who NEEDS toothpaste? Maybe that is the reason why the very intelligent man found a remedy for that.
Nowadays people no longer die whenever they would have a toothache. But THAT is the worst PAIN of all the PAIN that I have gone through!
Result.
After NOT USING a toothpaste regularly;
Breath: hmmm....for me it's still okay.
Cavities: I will have some in no time. (I'm started to have a very serious sensitive teeth).
Life: Still alive... :)
Mouth condition: Probably have a great amount of those 500 microorganisms living inside my mouth.
Disgusting.
I'm a woman.
I still care.
Anyway.
Want to know about the toothpaste history? If you're too lazy to check out wikipedia or just to google it... just read this.
This came from http://www.parentingtoddlers.com/toothpaste-history.html and nope....I didn't have the permission to show this...so I'm just gonna show SOME of what has been written.
Toothpaste History
The development of toothpaste began as long ago as 300/500BC in China and India. According to Chinese history, a learned man, Huang-Ti, studied the care of teeth and claimed different types of pain felt in the mouth could be cured by sticking gold and silver needles into different parts of the jaw and gum. It was theories such as these that led to the development of dental cream.
First attempts at tooth cleaning included using abrasives such as crushed bone, crushed egg and oyster shells, which were used to clean debris from teeth. Tooth powders were the first noticeable advance and were made up of elements like powdered charcoal, powdered bark and some flavouring agents. This would be applied to teeth using a simple stick.
Toothpowder or dentifrice was first available in Britain in the late eighteenth century. It came in a ceramic pot and was available either as a powder or paste. The rich applied it with brushes and the poor with their fingers.
Modern toothpastes were developed in the 1800s. A dentist called Peabody was the first to add soap to toothpaste in 1824. Chalk was first added to toothpaste by John Harris in the 1850s. In 1873, toothpaste was first mass-produced into nice smelling toothpaste in a jar. In 1892, Dr. Washington Sheffield of Connecticut was the first to put toothpaste into a collapsible tube. Sheffield's toothpaste was called Dr. Sheffield's Creme Dentifrice. Advancements in synthetic detergents (after World War II) replaced the soap used in toothpaste with emulsifying agents such as Sodium Lauryl Sulphate and Sodium Ricinoleate.
The 1960's saw the introduction of fluoride into toothpaste. This development was followed in the 1980's with the addition of soluble calcium fluoride to fluoride toothpastes. It is therefore within the last thirty years that toothpastes contains the two ingredients - calcium and fluoride. Nowadays, there are controversial views on the effectiveness and safety of fluoride toothpaste. For those who are safety concious, the use of natural toothpaste might be a better choice.
........
back to the lazy Wammy story.
According to what you have read.
Would you still consider TOOTHPASTE necessary for our lives? Yes. I guess so. Because we made it...we actually need it!
Tip from Elder Dayes:
How to Brush your TEETH.
1. Wash your toothbrush regularly. Like disinfect it every once in a while (Like I actually DO that..hehehe)
2. Brush your teeth. (Every CORNER please, this I love to do) Brush them without toothpaste just to clean it.
3.Brush your tongue.
4.Rinse.
5. Check your toothpaste if it has Fluoride in it. Any percentage would do.
6. Put your toothpaste on the toothbrush and start to lightly brush your teeth.
7. Try not to rinse. So as that protective coat (fluoride) would still be able to work on your teeth. Our teeth need 'em. So as we will never ever experience dying out of toothache again.
8. If you want to rinse it it's ok. That is if you dont want that soapy feeling in your mouth. But don't forget to use mouthwash after rinsing instead. And never ever forget to have a mouthwash with Fluoride in it. That's more important than just the fresh breath something that those TV commercials are showing us.
Excuse my grammar.
Good luck!!!
who needs toothpaste? I mean...who needs Fluoride? who needs Cavity?
you choose....
I will have to choose to buy a toothpaste too....tsk.
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