Here, in the village, Dr Chippy Thrideep opened the Varuna Dental
and Orthodontic Centre just three weeks ago. The road outside is dusty and
littered with the inevitable plastic wrappers, and sweet papers but the entrance
to the clinic is tiled and I stepped into a haven of air-conditioned comfort.
- it looked like this one in the showroom |
My visit stemmed from my annoyance at being charged £35 in Lincolnshire for my
dentist to re-fix and cement back one of my crowns that had come loose, and
which I just avoided swallowing. He had done a good enough job, but it had
taken barely 5 minutes. In a previous visit, his dental hygienist had given my
teeth a quick 10-minute once-over with the descaler and polishing brush, and
the charge had been £40. A month ago I had looked in the bathroom mirror at
home, and seen that my addiction to espresso was staining my teeth badly, and I
had decided that while I was in India, I would seek out a clinic that would
tackle both these issues.
It was with some trepidation that I had decided to call on
the local dentist. I have been staying in Vallyathodu, which barely qualifies
as a village. There are just a dozen shops, with merchandise hanging outside on
hooks; plastic toys, and cheap dresses, umbrellas and shirts. There is a
general store that sells all kinds of agricultural equipment from hoes and
mattocks to sickles and winnowing trays. There’s a lovely barber who wears a
broad grin as you sit in his enormous revolving chair while he snips away. The
price of my haircut was 100 rupees (98pence.) Then there’s the tea-shop, where old men sip
their sweet, milky chai and gossip like Greeks in a Kaphenion or Italians at a
bar in the piazza. I had not expected to find a dental clinic, but a colleague
at Mattindia had heard that it was recommended.
I sat in the waiting room of the Clinic, scanning the pages
of the Kerala equivalent of Homes & Gardens. Only the language differentiated
this magazine from any of its European equivalents. There were the same gleaming
kitchens with high-gloss cupboard doors and intricate mechanisms for shelves
that disappeared into the corner storage. There were vast sofas to accommodate and
impress your friends and relations, and there was bedroom furniture that would
have graced an oligarch’s seraglio.
After a while I met the dentist. “Hello, I’m Chippy, Chippy
Thrideep.” In name and nature, I quickly surmised. Chippy was somewhere in her
20s and had a perfect complexion with huge eyes under perfectly trimmed brows.
Her smile was what you would expect from a dentist and, and, um, well – let’s
just say that I was confident, for once, that I would enjoy my visit to her clinic.
The consulting room was immaculate. Chippy worked with great
concentration, removing any and every trace of coffee and red wine from the
dental enamel of my smile. She never nagged me to open wider, she apologised
any time the water jet of the ultra-sound touched a sensitive spot, and I just
lay back for an hour, admiring the spotlights in the shiny white ceiling.
She gave me strict instructions about letting my crown
settle down, and avoiding eating on that side of my mouth, and then she wrote
out the bill. Cleaning and polishing, 400 rupees: re-fixing crown, 200 rupees –
total 600 rupees. That’s about £5.88.
I didn’t haggle. That smile alone was worth a fiver.
No comments:
Post a Comment