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Well, like I've heard so many times this morning, my teeth aren't great. I do have a couple that are chipped and a couple of cavities that need to be filled and probably one tooth that needs to be yanked. But dental is so bloody expensive here, but I recently filled out applications for a Canadian dental plan, which is a government-subsidized dental plan that gives you 100% coverage on most stuff. So it's for Canadians that have a certain income or less, like less than 35 grand a year or something you qualify, which I definitely do. So I'm looking into that. I really don't like dentists and I don't go to them unless I really got to. But I've got like a cavity on the right upper side of my mouth and when I eat stuff, especially anything sweet, it drills the pain right up through my jaw. So I do have some work that needs to be done, but I've only ever had one tooth pulled. At 45 years old or almost 45 years old, I don't think that's too bad, only ever having one tooth pulled. And unfortunately, it was one of my eye teeth, you know, one of the pointy, fangy like ones on the sides on the top. It was one of them. And the dentist said, oh, you couldn't have picked the worst tooth to be your first one, because that tooth goes like right up almost to the side of your nose, right up through your top of your mouth, almost to the sides of your nose. And when she pulled that out, I can still feel the space going like right to the side of my nose where that tooth is missing, like up through the gums. I can feel like the empty area there. So unfortunately, I didn't have dental insurance back then. That tooth could have very well been fixed, but now it's gone forever. So that just sucks when you don't have dental insurance, man, because that's like one of the most expensive things out there to get fixed. Let me reset.

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