Only BDS students will understand these things
As dental students we undego struggles which are unique. Let's look at few of them
Dental students undergo certain unique experiences that no other student in any other stream could ever understand or experience. Though not all experiences are universal, most of them are quite universal in this field. Let me share a few of such incidents.
Everyone who first learns that you are going to dental school always jokes that it’s only about 32 teeth. They never understand the struggle we go through to study the entire head and neck structure in more detail than MBBS students. We are more experienced in identifying any anomaly in the orofacial region than other streams.
We never knew just a word could be traumatizing. Every effort we make to create a preclinical work would get rejected without a second look. Most of them would have to start from scratch, which could be painstaking and annoying.
Every procedure has a different instrument for a different purpose. We carry around a huge pouch of instruments, which also have different names. Learning these names and remembering them is more difficult. Most of the time, we invent new names which we understand among ourselves, rather than wrecking our brains over their original names. Sometimes, a completely different instrument would be used for a different purpose, as most of them would be stolen in the lab every day.
Pain is the constant companion throughout dental school. Bending a wire requires ultimate strength. Removing a cleaning is an entire process that takes up the whole day. Our hands are always in constant pain. Arching the back to treat patients could cause early back issues, which is a lifelong companion. This is less than the pain in our heart, shouldering the disrespect from the faculties.
Theory exams? Practicals? Viva? Clinics? There’s always something next. Relaxation is temporary. Stress is permanent.
The constant pressure and stress to complete the clinical quota is a Himalayan feat in itself. Being able to tackle these situations could mean you could survive anything in life.
At weddings. In movies. On Instagram. On the streets. Once a dental student, forever a silent tooth examiner.
Every single mistake you make is scrutinized more. You are under constant pressure to be perfect and presentable. Being covered in dental plaster is never an excuse. All instruments are supposed to be sparkling clean. Nothing you do will ever be enough.
You are required to carve wax into teeth to learn its anatomy. To create cubes out of dental stone. To patch up structures lost during impression. To fabricate anatomic structures over teeth. These artistry usually go unnoticed and undetected.