Just went to dentist and I have a cavity in my wisdom tooth and I've never had a cavity before and *deep breatgs* I am thinking I'm going to die. Need to calm down. 

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Replying to @o_guest
Jealous that you have your wisdom teeth! Mine were preventing my 12 year molars from coming in so I had to get the surgically removed at 16.pic.twitter.com/54Mn3ztxIE
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Replying to @ZKamvar
They are getting removed because the bastards started to rot.
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Replying to @o_guest
You may want to ask if the cavity is active or not. I went to a dentist once that tried to sell me ₩800,000 (~£500) of dental work to fill 8 cavities; 7 of which I found out were inactive from another dentist.
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Replying to @ZKamvar
Wow, that is awful. I did ask and he won't refer me till at least another 6 months. I don't think — thankfully! — such worries apply as removing them is free. The NHS is free, thankfully, at the point of use.
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And, yes, I know NHS dentists are not free — but this would be dental surgery, so different.
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Replying to @ZKamvar
They are free in certain cases. Fillings (in brown, IIRC) are free. I was doing cleaning though.
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And here and actually this one really explains it all:https://www.nhs.uk/using-the-nhs/nhs-services/dentists/understanding-nhs-dental-charges/ …
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