Visiting the Dentist
Today I made my first visit to a dentist in Japan. I have had a lot of pain in an erupting wisdom tooth since the middle of last week. This happened to the same tooth a couple of years ago. I went to see a dentist in Northern Ireland and at that time I was told the tooth was fine and that it was normal for this to cause a lot of pain.
This morning I woke at around 5.30am with a fever and decided that I would need to go and see someone about the tooth. I had no idea where to go so I did a quick search for “English speaking dentists in Tokyo”. Luckily for me one of the top results was a surgery in the building Marty works in. Going to the dentist can be quite a traumatic experience. I have never really understand what dentists do to make people feel so uncomfortable. Today I didn’t feel nervous but that was mainly because the fever made me feel sick and I was in quite a lot of pain – I didn’t really think anyone could make me feel worse.
I turned up without an appointment just after the surgery opened. I was told that I would have to wait for an hour. I was thrilled with this. When I had the problems in Northern Ireland I found it really hard to get an appointment at the dentist. Even though it was considered an emergency, because of the pain, I still had to wait for two days until a dentist could fit me in in their lunch break.
I was impressed with the surgery. It was really clean and peaceful. The dentist made me feel comfortable and took time to explain everything that was going to happen. It seemed more efficient than any dentist I have been to in Northern Ireland. The dentist who analysed my x-ray and looked at the tooth didn’t do any of the mundane things like taking the x-ray or cleaning my gums. He had a dental technician to do this for him.
Although the visit went well it turns out that I have a problem with my tooth. The dentist wanted to schedule surgery to remove it at the start of next week but I will be in Europe as I am going to YAPC::Europe. It’s haven’t felt well in days and it’s possible that I am going to feel awful throughout my whole European trip but I don’t want to cancel.
July 28th, 2008 at 8:40 pm
Do you have an HDTV or a cable box that you can watch Digital channels (地デジ)? If you do, there’re some shows with closed captions available that your DTV/STB can decode. http://tv.yahoo.co.jp/vhf/tokyo/realtime.html The shows with CC are marked with the green [字] icon.
I guess the other way to learn Japanese is to watch interesting shows with English subs (not dubs obviously). I’m sure hanekomu watched lots of j-dramas with this way. subs are only available on the internets and not over the air though.
July 30th, 2008 at 12:10 pm
We do have a cable box – I’ll have to see if I can find some things to watch with closed captions. (Marty is going to find out how we get these to display.)
I do try to buy Japanese films that have English subtitles – but since I don’t know much about Japanese cinema I rarely manage to buy anything that I end up liking enough to watch more than once.
I have bought some of the Disney films I like in Japanese and we have a bunch of Studio Ghibli films. Recently I have started to watch some cartoons like Pocket Monster – which I was surprised to like!