Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Diver Gingivitis

Today may have been the strangest day I have experienced thus far. By the time I got to work, I had pages worth of thoughts on the freaky Dutch but those nuggets have drowned in the rest of my bizarre day.

My boss, Marie, put it best. Holland is the most developed third world nation on earth. We ordered pizza for lunch because things are getting hectic at work and none of us wanted to leave for too long. The Dutch love the internet so it was perfectly reasonable for us to expect that we could order a pizza online. Danny, who has lived in Holland off and on for over a year, ordered a pizza from one of the local pizza joints. His confirmation email said, in English, "Your order will be delivered in three to five business days."

I worked a pretty long day, deciding to stay at the office until our weekly, Intern Tuesday Night Drinks. The bar was quintessentially Dutch, weird atmosphere with delicious beers. I didn't like the vibe and left fairly early. My legs and ankles were hurting when I got up from the bar stool. I said this aloud because it came suddenly and kinda scared me. Had the Dutch poisoned my beer with ankle depleting juice? Were my feet going to fall off my legs? It hit me without warning. Jon, my Texan friend, had a diagnosis. "It's Diver Gingivitis, have it in my family."

"Diver Ginvi- you're not serious."

"Yeah, swear to God, Diver Ginginvitis. Sarina, tell him. It runs in my family. What are your symptoms?"

"It hurts, kinda like a bruise."

"Yep, that's it. Diver Gingivitis. You'll be ok."

Five minutes later the pain had subsided and I realized it was just a severe case of my feet falling asleep. Diver Gingivitis. Jon will keep you on your toes.

The strangest and most Dutch part of the night came from the bartender. He was unpleasant all night. They were all unpleasant but this one guy was just ridiculous. I had to wait for twenty minutes or so each time I wanted a drink and the only people in the bar were those in my party. It's not like these guys were overwhelmed with work. After waiting for a good twenty minutes, another bartender took my order and rude bartender walked over near me. Europeans have no concept of personal space so I wasn't worried about him standing almost on top of me. I had just finished drinking my beer and had set my glass on the bar. Without warning, the rude, weird bartender takes my glass and, instead of taking it away, chugs the remaining beer which consisted of a small puddle of my backwash. The Dutch.

2 comments:

Jim Gallaway said...

Teddy P: I have enjoyed keeping up with you through your blog. Each posting is like the next chapter of a good book. Thanks for sharing. You should know that I have it on good authority that the integrity of Mercantile Bank has been restored since Travis has returned. It appears now that they will begin loaning money again and have re-opened their teller lines in anticipation of taking deposits again.

Maragret and I will be heading up to Gainesville (sans the quotation marks) this Saturday to watch the Gators rip KY apart (regrets to your Mom and Dad). While we will see Sean, it will not be as much fun without you and Jami there. We will get through this, however. We don't have a parking pass for this game, so we"ll park at Sean's and find our way to the stadium. Much like your description of cleaning your apt., Sean mentioned yesterday that he was going to begin cleaning his house before we arrive on Saturday, but already realized there still was not enough time. It really isn't a problem, we can merely drink the Bloody Marys out of a Solo cup.

Hope all is well and continues to be. Take care of that Diver Gingivitis. I am familiar with this rare and insidious disease. Left unattended, it has the tendency to develop into a far more complicated disease known in medical communities as "sphincter nomorecloses". This is by far a much more debilitating and, quite frankly, embarrassing disease. Jim

Calvin Fred said...

Gingivitis will develop into periodontitis. If it is left uncontrolled, gingivitis will become periodontitis , where the anaerobic bacteria penetrate the protective skin of your gums and enter the connective tissue that attaches your teeth to the bone of the jaw. Destruction of the connective tissue loosens the teeth and the bacteria moves on to attack and destroy bone.


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