Gilly’s Journey Ch. 32
By: NapaCaster
The next several weeks of filming went well, and I am feeling quite at home and comfortable with my casts, halo brace, and my jaw wired shut most of the time. Every other weekend, Marc unwires my jaw and replaces the wires with elastics so I can exercise my jaw and eat solid food. Maggie is still wired shut from her surgery; she is healing very slowly, and I feel bad every time Marc unwires me, knowing that Maggie has been continuously wired shut for over two months. I hope she can get them off in another two weeks, but I have yet to hear her complain about anything. I think Maggie is like me and actually likes being wired shut. Miles has had his wires off for weeks now and is back to eating solid food, but he still must wear his splint with elastics when not eating or brushing.
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Well, our schedule got set back for a few weeks. On the day that we filmed the scene where B.J. gets her casts removed and the LLC on her left leg gets changed out for a SLC, the crew ended up getting food poisoning. It was the day before Maggie got unwired, so since both of us were wired shut, we were spared since we didn't eat anything. She is so thankful that she had to spend the additional weeks wired shut, which prevented her from getting sick, and boy did everyone get sick.
Oh, and Maggie's smile is looking so good, too. I could tell from her profile that her surgery really changed her face for the better. However, her splint and wires covered up her teeth so much that her smile really couldn't be seen. Now that she can remove her splint to eat and brush, I got a really good look at her new smile, and it is almost perfect. She still has to wear her splint with elastics for several more months and won't be getting her braces off anytime soon, but she is looking great, and she is so happy she is getting her smile fixed.
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So, after a two-week break for everyone to recover from the food poisoning—it was really bad—we had another setback. There was a wildland fire that took out the power lines and substation that supply electricity to the studio. At least they arrested the firebug who started the fire, and he will be in jail for a very long time. It took another two weeks to get power restored since there was so much damage.
What this all meant was that I got to spend an extra month in my halo brace, short leg cast, and with my jaw wired shut. I was supposed to shoot the scene when B.J. got unwired the day after everyone got sick, so it appeared that B.J. got her casts removed and unwired the same day. Well, that didn't happen, and I got to enjoy everything for an extra month. So when we got back to filming this week, the first thing was B.J. getting unwired, her feeding tube removed, and getting braces again. This was planned as part of the screenplay, but since I was wired shut for so long and couldn't wear my retainers with brackets on them-my teeth had moved quite a bit. So, I got braces again while still in my halo and short leg cast, with it all being filmed for the show. It was quite exciting for both Marc and me to have him working in my mouth with my head and neck completely immobilized.
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Well, the season of filming is almost over, and I got my halo brace off about a month ago, and I miss it. My neck was very weak, so I needed to wear a hard collar for a while, and we worked that into the show. The first half of the season dealt with B.J.'s recovery with Amber by her side, taking care of her. The second half is about B.J. and Amber beginning their fashion design careers, with B.J. facing many challenges. Not only did she have to begin working while still wearing her hard collar, but she also has to wear a KAFO on her badly injured left leg, which has nerve damage. That means I get to wear my left KAFO for the rest of the season. The only scenes left to shoot are the wedding scenes where B.J. and Amber get married. Last season ended in tragedy, and this one ends on a very happy note with the girls getting married and them moving to Paris to pursue their careers with a large design house. We have no idea if we will be signed for more seasons, so we wanted things to end very positively, since positivity and overcoming challenges have been the theme all through the series.
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With filming done for a while, it will be several years before the last season we filmed airs; life is once again very relaxed. I didn't like the braces I got after my teeth moved after being wired shut; they were just metal brackets since the story didn't revolve around B.J.’s Milwaukee brace or orthodontic braces anymore. I had Marc put in all the same appliances that I had worn for years, but with two little changes. I used to have brackets on my front teeth, but I had Marc band all my teeth, and they look great. The other thing is that I had him place surgical hooks on my archwires between each band so I could be wired shut at any time with or without a splint. This will be so much better than the archbars I had before; it was quite painful to get them removed. I had them for so long that they started to grow into my gums.
I'm also back to living my life wearing my KAFOs and Milwaukee brace full time, and when I go out, I most often use my wheelchair. They still bring me the same comfort that they have for years, and since they are getting worn out and a little tight, I recently got scanned for a new set. They will be ready before our next trip to Scotland.
Speaking of my braces not fitting as well as they used to, I've put on a little weight. Not too much; I'm only up to 102 pounds after weighing 96 pounds for many years. My face is starting to age a little bit, and I have a few wrinkles around my eyes, nose, and corners of my mouth. They look cute, but I still look very young. What am I now, thirty-three? I would say that I almost pass for my age now, especially since I have some wisps of gray hair; my mother grayed early in life, too.
Maggie and Miles are now engaged, but they have not set a wedding date yet. She credits her luck in finding such a great guy by being the lucky girl to catch my headgear at my wedding. Maggie joins Sally and me on our Friday girls night out, and Miles goes bowling with Marc and Ron. Even though Miles is a beginner, he has a great talent for the sport.
When Maggie and I go out shopping or just for some fun, we often wire each other shut for the day. She asked Marc to leave her surgical hooks for her to have fun with, and she does have fun with them. We love going out with a ton of wires securing our jaws tightly around our splints. Oh, the attention we get, especially with me in my orthopedic braces and wheelchair, and we love talking to strangers. As you know, I'm always in my back and leg braces, and I never wear a hairstyle that I wore on film, so I never get recognized. Oh, it sure seems that Maggie shares my love of orthodontics and is thinking of doing something like Sally with her inactive braces once her teeth are straight.
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It's been some time since I last did any writing. Marc and I spent a month in Scotland, and we had a great time. We visited with some family members that he had never met, and everyone accepted me and my braces without question. I used both my wheelchair and my crutches on the trip and had a lot of fun. Marc can't figure out what he likes best, me rolling along side him in my wheelchair or walking behind me, watching me move gracefully on crutches with my legs locked stiff; I enjoy doing both.
I have also played a few small roles for Bill-Jack Productions, but I'm always credited as 'Maggie LeBron'. With my hair really beginning to gray, I look nothing like B.J. Greene now. These roles are often just as a handicapped woman crutching or rolling along during a street scene and not actually a character in the production. It's fun, and it's a nice break from my accounting work and working in Marc's orthodontic lab at home. Since Dr. Joe has retired and Marc has taken over the clinic, I now do the books for MacGregor Orthodontics. I'm always finding ways to pay lower taxes and increase profits, and Marc has been able to expand the business, and he has three orthodontists working for him now. Marc only works a few days a week, if that, and he only takes on the most difficult and challenging of cases, leaving the rest to his associates.
Since the clinic is so busy, Marc was contracting out the fabrication of common appliances like retainers. Long ago, Marc taught me how to make these types of appliances, and I really enjoy the work. I work in our little lab at home several hours a day and I really like it. It's very relaxing and a bit artistic, sculpting the plastic and wires to perfectly and comfortably fit in someone's mouth. Since my labor is free, the only cost is the materials, which are inexpensive, leading to higher profits. Since I don’t really like going out anymore, it gives me a fun hobby that allows me to stay at home, which I like.
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Today in the mail, I got the letter that Bailey had warned me I would be receiving. It was a copy of a letter sent to Bill-Jack Productions from the DuMont Network stating that the contract for 'The Life of B.J. Greene' would not be renewed. The reasons given were a general change in television viewing habits and some odd demographic information from the first few weeks of what is now the final season. All previous seasons, teenage girls made up 60% of viewership, with the remaining 40% split between teenage boys and couples between 55 and 70. It makes sense; the program is for teenagers, and the older people are reminiscing about their youth.
However, there was a drastic change in demographics for the last season. The vast majority of viewers were adult men in the 25–40 and 41–55 age groups, with the rest of the viewership split as before. This stunned the network and greatly affected selling advertising time. How do you get sponsors for a program aimed at teenage girls when the majority of viewers are adult men? The network and advertising men couldn't figure it out, but I know the reason: It's men like Marc and Ron who have a thing for pretty girls in casts and braces. I know this for a fact from posts on the cast and brace message boards. Everyone is talking about B.J. and her injuries, her halo brace, wired jaw, and casts. It's all fetishists watching!
Am I sad that it has come to an end? No, not really. We had a great run and helped a lot of kids out as they faced the challenges of high school and college. The program will be in syndication, so it will continue to help kids out. This is what Bailey and Hailey wanted; they had a hard time when they were young and wanted to show girls that things will work out in the end if they persevere. For me personally, if I hadn't taken this job, I never would have met Marc, nor would I have met Sally or Maggie, who are now my best friends. I got to experience many things that I had dreamed of experiencing during filming, too. How many people get paid to wear a halo brace with their jaw wired shut and with casts on all their limbs? And how many people would be in absolute heaven in that situation? I did, and I was; it was wonderful for Marc and me. Oh, don't forget the other people I worked with and became friends with, like Bailey, Hailey, Jenny, Janie, and Georgina, who just graduated college early with a degree in engineering; her dream came true, too.
As to continuing to act, with the investments I made and Marc's success, I don't need the money. Will I continue to make appearances on stage at times? Sure, I think I will. I don't want to be in front of the camera day after day, week after week anymore, but shooting for a few days would still be fun, and I'm still under contract with Bill-Jack Productions. But I'm happy with my life as it is, doing my accounting work and making orthodontic appliances for Marc. I'm also happy living my life as a handicapped woman, too. The few times a month that I go out in public, I’m never without my orthopedic braces, and I still have a mouthful of bands and appliances along with my headgear.
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Oh, I must apologize for disappearing for so long. With my life falling into a routine, I completely forgot to keep you updated about what's going on. I only remembered because I had to look for a file on a laptop that I haven't used for a couple of years. You must have thought I died or something—I'm so sorry for leaving you hanging like that.
Well, I just rolled back to the house in my new power wheelchair after spending a rainy fall day working in my little orthodontics lab. I made five sets of retainers today and also got caught up on my accounting work. Things are pretty much the same in my life, with Marc and I being as happy as ever. He takes good care of me and doesn't mind that I don't like going out anymore. Every once in a while I let him take me out for dinner, and every so often I go to the grocery store with him. Sometimes I even take my old car out for a drive, but I always have Marc take it to the gas station for me.
Marc goes into his clinic a couple days a week to deal with the more complicated cases. He also takes care of all the shopping and other errands for the household and spends a lot of time with his baseball card collection and restoring old Vespa scooters. Marc also still goes bowling every Friday night, and Sally and I hang out together at my home those evenings, cooking and enjoying dinner together. Sometimes Sally talks me into going out for dinner, even if that just means eating in the car at a drive-in. When Marc or Sally convince me to go out, I do like getting dressed up really nice—it makes me feel a little bit more comfortable when I'm out in public, but I really don't like going out. I only do it for them.
Oh, everything is great with my eyes, and I have about a dozen pairs of glasses now. My teeth are perfectly straight once again, but I am still in my bands with retaining archwires and wearing headgear. Oh, the expanders, splint, and tongue crib are all still in my mouth, too. I love having a mouthful of metal, and Marc recently said there was another appliance he would like to add the collection of metal in my mouth. It's a device that is sort of like a Herbst appliance, but the telescopic sections can be locked in any position to allow my jaw to be immobilized—I'm really excited to get it.
Marc is still wearing his braces, tongue crib, and high pull headgear, too. His braces now have retaining archwires like mine and Sally's so his teeth don't move, and his headgear is fitted to be very loose. Like me, he simply enjoys how his braces look and how they feel in his mouth. I like how he looks wearing them and feeling all the metal in his mouth when we take off our headgear to kiss. Since Marc's clinic only takes on adult clients, and he deals with the difficult cases that often require things like headgear, he feels that being in headgear himself and having his assistant wearing headgear puts clients at ease. I think he has a good point—if you needed such an appliance, would you feel more at ease if your handsome orthodontist and his very pretty assistant were wearing them themselves?
The only thing that has changed is my hair and my back brace. I now have a full head of long, gray hair, and I look so mature, sophisticated, and sexy. Often, I wear one of my new back braces called a CTLSO. I have several to match my KAFOs, and they are much like Milwaukee braces, but they cradle the back of my head and have a well-padded chin cup. When I'm in this type of brace, I can't move my head at all—well, maybe a little bit—and I love how it feels.
Sitting in my wheelchair, waiting for Marc to come home, I got to looking at the cast and brace message board. There was a post by a gal that goes by 'L-Cast- with a link to her new business, 'The Clinic', which she stated is a 'place where orthodontic and orthopedic dreams come true'. I clicked on the link and explored the website, which was extremely interesting. I was looking at the services provided—things like getting casts applied, orthodontic treatment just for pleasure like Marc, Sally, and I are enjoying, vintage hospital experiences. Then there was one thing that really caught my eye—electronic paralysis. Ever since I started wearing my orthopedic braces full time, I have dreamed about being paralyzed and really needing to wear them.
I read the bio of Dr. Myra Johnson, who developed the procedure originally as a form of pain control. Then, with her knowledge of paraphilias and BIID, her husband modified the device to provide controlled temporary or long-term paralysis and to simulate other aspects of spinal cord injuries. There are both external devices for temporary use, or after a long psychological evaluation and the use of the external device continuously for one year, the client could then get a device implanted for permanent use. My heart almost jumped out of my chest as I read these words. I could be paralyzed at will and control every aspect of it, such as having feeling and no movement, complete paralysis, or partial paralysis. It can even be programmed to affect bladder and bowel control and it can even cause uncontrollable spasms. Without even consulting with Marc, I called and scheduled an appointment with Dr. Johnson.
When Marc came home, I let him look over the website, and he was quite impressed with the entire concept, especially the recreational orthodontic services offered. He then dug a little deeper into the services provided. Marc then looked at me and asked if I saw the services that Dr. Johnson provides. I said that not only had I seen what she had to offer, I had also made an appointment.
Marc stood up and removed his headgear, and I took mine off too. He picked me up from my wheelchair, and I put my arms around his neck since I can't stand without assistance anymore. I put my arms around his neck, and we kissed passionately. When the kiss broke off, he hugged me tightly and simply said, "Pursue your dreams, Gilly, with me by your side."
***To Be Continued in 'Leigh and Joel; The New Beginning'***