The assistants in the orthodontist's office think I'm the worst parent in the world. Background: Allison is scared of new things; I lack patience.
So, the first trip (where they put in the spacers) ended in screaming. From Allison, not me. The assistant tried to reassure her, Allison kept asking questions, reassurance, same questions, reassurance, same questions. Rinse and repeat. MANY TIMES. Finally, it gets done. Screaming.
Second trip - remove spacers, take impressions (yuck), replace spacers. Reassurance, questions, reassurance, stalling, reassurance, "hey, want to hear a story about my vacation" (clearly stalling), took too long - the impression material hardened before they got it in her mouth. Repeat - only this time I am more forcefully applying Mom-Pressure ("JUST OPEN UP!"). Same result - too long - no good. Third time - after much gagging - she gets it done. The 30 minute appointment was one hour - twenty minutes.
Third trip - remove spacers, insert appliance. I send her back alone thinking this might work better. No. I hear (as does everyone in the waiting room) some variation of the following conversation: "Ok, open up, I'm just going to remove the spacers, remember this doesn't hurt." "I'm scared." "But remember, you've done this before, I just need to take them out and it doesn't hurt." "But, will it hurt?" Back and forth - somewhere between 5-10 minutes.
I walk back - "Allison, you did this before, quit stalling, open up." Big sigh from Allison. "Fine." Mouth open, spacers out - 30 second later. I return to my seat only to be called back about 5 minutes later because she's again refusing to open her mouth to put the expander in. I'd like to think I was firm and direct, but I'm pretty sure the frustration was seeping into my "it WON'T hurt, just TRY it." Finally I showed her my watch (30 minutes into the 30 minute appointment) asked her what time it was (4:00) and what happened at 4:30 (Liz comes over) so just do this thing. Ok, appliance placed, orthodontist checked.
Now we have to take it out and do it again - with glue. Big deep breath. "I don't like the glue, I don't want to taste the glue, how long will the glue be in there, NO GLUE!" Despite repeat assurances that the glue was tasteless, the assistant put the "littlest amount of glue on ever" she had it in her head that something else was going to happen. It's very difficult to make Allison's brain change lanes when she's decided the world in one way and you insist it's another. So again - here's me - "just open up, you did this like 15 minutes ago and it didn't hurt." Thirty minute appointment now over an hour.
And for anyone whose encountered Allison in the last month and heard all about what she can and cannot eat with spacers - we've now upped the ante. Orthodontia are clearly not conducive to a high calorie diet - unless that diet is purely milkshakes, which is what I gave her for breakfast this morning.