Ah, the memories. Today some of them are even funny. In real time fifty years ago it was all about the miseries and dread; about the ignominies wearing braces and headgear all but assured; the grim reality of being stuck in headgear, often on public display, for most or all of the day; the tedium of appointment every three weeks taking up hours, including drive time, for ten minutes in the chair; the ongoing torment, constraints and embarrassments provided by countless rubber bands; the ongoing fear that something visible is stuck in that barbed wire of a smile; endless hours maintaining and polishing all of that stainless steel; never ending stream of stupid questions, comments, taunts and nicknames; then finished off with retainers to drag all the inconvenience and drool for years longer.
The horror for me wasn’t just the hardware itself, I never thought it hurt as much as many people say. Tightenings happened and I could feel it but never to the point I couldn’t chew, or more like wouldn’t chew (I was a teenage boy). It was being seen in the hardware, it was being a damn slave to the hardware, trapped in them with no way to get them off until the evil orthodontist decided to free you. Your only hope for a fast result was to walk around with an antenna sticking out of your mouth. To a teenage guy forced to wear all the 1960’s style quasi-primitive orthodontic metal, it seemed a steep price to pay for a straight smile in a couple of years, or more.
And when I say stupid questions and comments I mean like someone walking up to you and asking “are you wearing headgear?” when I obviously had a big piece of wire sticking out of my mouth with a dark blue strap around my neck. Or “when are you getting those braces off?” when I only had them on a week. One I will always remember, the day after they went on is, in front of a group on the bus, “boy, those are some serious braces…you must have a ton of metal in there…your braces are way worse than mine were…yours really stick out, I mean they are really obvious.”
She was the same witch who on the day I had to show up at a football game with my headgear on “great, now you’re the perfect dork”. It got a big laugh. She and her junior/senior tribe never missed a chance to toss an insult, bump in the hallway, block the camera etc, etc, etc. Two years later I was driving and saw her broken down on the side of the road. I did the right thing and gave her a lift to get it towed. She was oh so nice and apologetic about all of the nasty things they did back then. I was almost ready to forgive her until she asked “aren’t you tired of wearing those braces, you would look attractive without them”.
After two and a half years I was ready to grab the pliers myself but I did not need to hear I was not attractive because of that array of metal staring back at me in the mirror every morning. I was ready to get them off. After all I wore the headgear for almost two years, mostly as instructed. I was not as good with the rubber bands. For some reason I would not wear them unless mom was hounding me. That caught up with me in a big way when the ortho, believing me as I lied about the rubber bands started me wearing headgear again, along with stronger elastics. Oops. I did not want to admit to the lie and it was only while I slept so I left with it safely tucked away in its pouch.
I started wearing the rubber bands all of the time, except while eating or brushing. For almost a year I had them running everywhere in different configurations. I had wasted at least six months by not cooperating with the elastics and some more time with missed appointments so that was on me.
Not all braces stories from back in the day are bad, like a guy I knew in my teen years. He was perfectly willing to wear the hardware. I went to a small Catholic grammar school back in the 60’s. In 1965 the Pope Paul VI came to New York City and had a mass at Yankee Stadium and a stop at the World’s Fair. We were supposed to go to the mass but our train was too late so we ended up on a bus with another small catholic grammar school and going to the World’s Fair, the Pope’s next stop. I was sitting next to another 5th grader from the other school and he had a notable overbite, the biggest on anyone I have ever known. He was called Bucky by his classmates, it was a taunt, not an endearment.
We spent most of the trip in the same group, he avoided most of his classmates, but I liked the guy, he was as sarcastic as me and a very quick wit. He was extremely conscious of smile and there was no way to cover up and I could see the problems eating caused. In the crowd that day was a girl wearing headgear, and Kevin did not take his eyes off her. I said I would hate to have to wear anything like that, Kevin’s response was “Not me”. After the bus ride I did not see him again for over a year.
My cousin was getting married at St Agnes Cathedral which was about an hour away from my home. Cousin Mary wanted me to be an altar boy at her wedding service and I was partnered with an altar boy from the Cathedral who knew the church. He turned out to be Kevin. We remembered each other instantly and we did the wedding mass, all told about 4 hours. He mumbled a lot that day after just having some teeth removed.
A year later I was in seventh grade at a science fair. The secret to entering a science fair is to get a genius for a partner and mine ended up going to MIT on a full scholarship. Shelly was no good at the English language but was a wizard at computer language, her father was a computer engineer. Her competition was a kid from St. Agnes who was also into computers. It was Kevin who was now wearing a high pull headgear and full braces. The braces made the overbite look even worse.
His braces had gone on two months before and he remembered my comment about the girl wearing headgear at the Fair and was right up front, anything was better than his teeth sticking out so he did not care about the insults from his classmates or the staring, he wanted the braces and if that meant wearing headgear all day, every day, then that is what he was going to do. Kevin and Shelly got along great talking computers. We both got ribbons and that pissed off my science teacher who had to give me an A.
In May of 1968 Mary was having her son baptized back up at St. Agnes. I had just served my last mass as an altar boy that morning and was not thrilled to be sitting through my second mass of the day before the baptism. I saw a total of five kids that day wearing headgear which I think was my one day record. A boy then a girl, both my age, were leaving one mass and a younger girl was walking in and sitting two pews in front of me, all of them wearing cervical headgears.
Then there was Kevin up on the altar wearing a cervical headgear. This was really unfortunate since I was only recently informed that I had an orthodontist appointment in a couple of weeks. Our new dentist was “very concerned” that without “comprehensive treatment” my jaw relationship would “deteriorate”. I was not a thumb sucker but I had a habit if sleeping on my hand and that had distorted my jaws as I was growing. They were now at odds with each other and the teeth on that side were pushed in creating an open bite. My ortho, sensing my reluctance to wear the appliances, pointed out that my smile was not going to fix itself.
There was a long break between ceremonies and I went back to talk to Kevin. His teeth and braces were now fully inside of his mouth and you could see how happy he was. I asked what was up with all the kids wearing headgear and he said it was his orthodontist that insisted some of his cases wear headgear the full 22-24 hours per day. It was part of Kevin’s treatment plan and Kevin and his parents had to agree to cooperate with the plan. He said that by the time high school started he would only need to wear it at night “and no more Bucky”.
I told him about my upcoming appointment and he offered his regrets after telling me I would get used to them and most kids don’t have headgear. His ortho said his braces would be off by Christmas because he was such a good patient. Besides, he pointed out, even if I needed headgear most orthodontist do not require full time headgear wear like his. Also, most kids that have headgear never wear it as much as the orthodontist says they should.
I saw Kevin twice more, once at a college fair at Hofstra University. He was still a little on the small size but his smile looked great, no one could tell how big a change his braces made in both appearance and attitude. I was still a couple of months away from having mine removed. The final time was at a party in Boston two years later. We were both drunk and enjoying the company of our the current girlfriends. His was about four inches taller and had a noticeable overbite on otherwise perfect teeth. I always wondered what the kids would look like.
Kevin was fully willing to wear it all because he had endured so much dealing with that massive overbite but other kids with less serious ailments absolutely hated being forced to wear it all day, school and all. There was something about the name of his orthodontist that bothered me. In these days of seeing mail order orthodontic treatment which is sold on TV it has to be remembered back then orthodontist could not advertise, they only accepted referrals from dentist and my dentist had just given me a referral.
On the long drive back that day my mother commented on Kevin wearing headgear. Not just Kevin, she saw all of those kids wearing some form of headgear including back at my cousins house her husband’s cousin, aged 11, was wearing a high pull headgear. I expressed how much I did not want to wear braces, pretty much standard for guys at the time, Kevin being the exception. “My teeth aren’t that bad.” I finished with something like ‘I sure as hell am not wearing headgear’.
Looking back I can say fortunately I lost that argument. She did not like my attitude and I was going to do whatever the orthodontist said and if that was headgear then I would wear headgear. “Lot’s” of kids had braces and “lots” of them wore headgear.
“Lots of them” did not wear headgear, but I did. The next time I saw Kevin I was doing the a/v for the football team. I tape recorded practices and games using equipment as out of date today as my braces. I did all of the football and basketball games for four years all because the seniors who used to do it borrowed the equipment, got drunk and filmed one of them having sex at a party, which is pretty much taboo at every catholic school. So as a freshman that was very exciting staying late with the varsity teams and traveling with them on away games.
All except for the headgear. My mother was a full time working mom almost all of my life. When asked the secret of her success (and she was successful) she always said “scheduling”. The day I came home wearing my neck brace said I didn’t need to fill out any scorecard, I would just wear it “on schedule”. To her that meant all I had to do was put it on at 4 pm every day and wore it until 6am I would have almost 14 hours without a problem and I would never have to wear it to school.
I pointed out I would not get home until 6 every night and the eating and drinking problem with a big piece of wire sticking out of my mouth. She agreed and said 11 hours every night was still possible and I could wear it more on the weekend. I then pointed out that would mean I would have to wear it literally all weekend. “Then that’s what you need to do.” Or I could put it on earlier in the day.
As evil fates would have it the reason something sounded familiar when Kevin mentioned his ortho’s name was because that was the same last name as my new ortho. They were brothers. They had the same orthodontic philosophy, the same love of headgear and he agreed with my mother’s schedule and wrote it as part of the treatment plan. As he described it I should “wear the hell out of it” by averaging “at least” 16 hours a day.
I still think that was just arrogance on Dr. G’s part and I think the fact that you never see any kids wearing them in public these days and they still seem to end up with perfectly straight teeth proves it. A guy by the name of Kloehn started the cervical traction craze in the late 1940’s and he only wanted 10-12 hours a night, not 16-23 hours a day.
The low point was showing up at football games with it on. I had a choice, become the top a/v guy for the football team and wear my headgear to the games, or hide at home and wear the headgear. Either way I was going to wear headgear. So the humiliation of the headgear was somewhat muted by lucking in to a great gig.
So when we played St. Agnes that year it was me standing with Kevin and I was the one wearing headgear and kids pointing and laughing. You know what they were saying, just like me about the girl at the world’s fair five years ago, I’m glad that’s not me.” His advice was that by now everyone knew I wore it so “the damage is done, what difference does it make now?” “How long will you have to wear it?” Sadly, he was asking months if not years. And the ortho only gave us a 20 to 24 month estimated treatment time with caveats for cooperation and growth patterns.
His braces would be off in two months so when our basketball teams played, I still had headgear on and his braces were off. He was a happy guy with a great smile and I always felt good for him. My misery lasted until middle of senior year, only 18 months longer than he expected, and I cooperated!!! It got tremendously frustrating by the end. Classmates still remembered my braces at the reunion as being the worst in the school.
Over the years posting here I have let others use my password to add their comments, including my wife who is still mad at the horror of a 13 year old girl forced to wear headgear in a very public way. Another was a good friend Mike, who regularly came out to visit in March (until covid) and has a story about his treatment that lasted 5 years. He took a writing class online while locked in the house during covid with the assignment each week was to write a biography of a decade of his life with amazing detail. His teen years part is all about braces and headgear, with some sex and stupidity mixed in. Even unfinished it shows the reality of what it was like 50 years ago, not the fantasy ‘combined full bands, tongue crib, expander, lip bumpers and 10 rubber bands with combination headgear and facemask’ fiction of today. I will post it in the story section.