When my dentist mentioned my stained teeth, I decided to quit coffee and tea. But the sugar-free drinks I started downing left me with nasty jitters

Vanity made me do it. I had been to the dentist and, in between poking horrible things into my mouth, she asked if I drank a lot of coffee. “Unhhyeahhhh!” I said, as best I could. (Why do dentists always talk to you when it’s obvious you’re in no position to answer?) “I can tell!” she said. “There’s a lot of staining. Try drinking less coffee.” I gurgled something in agreement, while indignantly thinking that the dentist should try brushing up on her social skills. Still, I immediately resolved to cut down.

Actually, vanity was probably only 90% of the impetus to reduce my coffee intake. The other 10% was patriotic pride. I’m a Brit in the US – and we all know the reputation that Brits have when it comes to their teeth. I felt I had a duty to try and counter that reputation. I decided to give up coffee and tea (equally bad for the teeth), but I didn’t want to give up caffeine, so I came up with a cunning plan: instead of drinking five to eight teas and coffees a day, I started drinking five to eight sugar-free energy drinks a day. With a straw, obviously.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

I had accepted my life in prison – until it prevented me helping a friend in need

For 16 years, on and off, I was held at Her Majesty’s…

Third of Queen’s birthday honours go to heroes of pandemic

Nurse, fundraising quizmaster and volunteer paramedic among those recognised Coronavirus – latest…

‘This is a cult’: inside the shocking story of a religious weight-loss group

In a strange new docuseries, the dark world of the Remnant Fellowship…

Activision Blizzard: US judge blocks takeover by Microsoft until further hearings

Federal Trade Commission secures delay of $69bn deal which it argues would…