I had a system for almost 10 years.
Every time I thought
about booking a dental appointment, I rewarded myself by doing something else
instead. Clean the garage? Done. Call a friend? Absolutely. Reorganize the junk
drawer for the third time this month? Why not? It’s practically a public
service.
But call the dentist?
That could wait and it did for 10 years.
After all, there were
perfectly reasonable explanations. Life gets busy. Appointments take time. And
let’s be honest, no one wakes up in the morning thinking, “You know what would
make today special? Someone poking around my mouth with sharp instruments.”
So, the thought gets
postponed. Not cancelled, just gently moved to “later.” A very crowded place
where many good intentions go to sit quietly together.
Now, to be fair, there are
moments when procrastinating on a dental appointment makes sense. If you’re
juggling more urgent priorities, dealing with a temporary financial pinch, or
even just needing a short mental break from appointments and obligations,
delaying for a little while isn’t the end of the world. Life isn’t meant to
feel like a constant checklist.
But here’s where the
story tends to repeat itself.
“Later” stretches. Weeks
turn into months. Months turned into years. That small sensitivity you noticed
when sipping something cold? Still there. That little voice saying, “You should
probably get that checked”? Still talking, though now it’s competing with a
slightly louder voice saying, “I really don’t want to deal with this.”
And here’s the
uncomfortable truth: dental problems are remarkably patient… until they’re not.
What starts as a minor
issue, something simple, manageable, maybe even inexpensive, has a way of
growing when ignored. It doesn’t send reminders. It doesn’t negotiate. It just
quietly progresses until one day it demands your full, immediate attention, usually
at the most inconvenient time possible.
Suddenly, you’re not
choosing an appointment that fits your schedule. The problem is choosing for
you.
And let’s talk about the
anticipation, because that’s often the real villain in this story.
The idea of the
appointment, the sounds, the smells, the imagined discomfort, tends to be far
worse than the reality. Most visits are routine, professional, and over before
you’ve had time to regret sitting in the chair. Dentists today are not the
villains of childhood memory; they’re problem-solvers trying to keep small
things small.
There’s also something
quietly empowering about taking action. I made the call. I picked the time. I stayed
in control of the situation, rather than reacting to it later when it’s bigger,
louder, and more expensive.
Imagine my situation
again, but this time, I pause mid–junk drawer reorganization, pick up the
phone, and book the appointment. It takes five minutes. I hang up, slightly
surprised at how painless that part was.
The appointment came and went.
There were a few things wrong. I was lucky a few things that were minor that got
handled quickly. Either way, it was done.
And that persistent
little voice? Finally quiet.
So yes, it’s okay to put
things off briefly when life demands it. But dental care has a way of rewarding
those who show up early, and penalizing those who wait too long.
If you’ve been meaning to
book that appointment, don’t aim for perfect timing. Aim for done.
Because the best dental
visit is almost always the one you didn’t wait too long to make.