Does Brushing your Teeth wear them down alot?

How often do you really brush your teeth right after eating something acidic?

Huh. Learn something new every day.

I only avoid brushing in morning when I wake up. maybe there is bacteria starting to build up from the night & thats why a morning brush is needed? I always thought it was so your breath didn’t smell.

After every meal I rinse my mouth out with water a few times depending on what I ate.

Not sure if this is bad given the water gargles around fast & could wear down your teeth.

This indicates manufacturers should not be allowed * to sell harder brushes generally; and that they only be available from dentists after consultation.

  • Yeah, a million libertarian freeper goldnut prepper websites would arise claiming a Rockefeller Globalist conspiracy to take away our right to hard toothbrushes.

know a guy who had gum problems from brushing too much. He had to get work done on his gums

WTF is in your water? Acid?

I’m inclined to NOT take this seriously, but on the off chance it is - water is NOT going to “wear down your teeth”. Your mouth is not the Grand Canyon, for starters, it’s not nearly that old. Water isn’t going to wear down your teeth, you might as well give up eating because the food you consume is far more abrasive than water.

As noted, it’s not so much abrasion that screws up teeth it’s the acids excreted from bacteria munching on food leftovers in your mouth. And that’s the purpose of brushing and flossing, to remove those bits so the bacteria don’t shit acid into your mouth. The water rinses you do will also help with that, so that’s a positive.

Have you ever talked to a real dentist about these concerns?

Do people really even need to be told not to brush right after drinking orange juice? Quite aside from the risk of damage, doing so makes the toothpaste taste terrible.

I can see this in my own family. My father and I are cavity prone, and so was my maternal grandmother. On the ER hand, my maternal grandfather had 3 cavities total in his 83 years, my mom has had slightly more, and my brother as had 2-3 at nearly 38. And he’s always been less diligent about brushing and flossing than me. :mad:

Genetic tooth composition and mouth environment have a lot to do with it, although you can offset it significantly by being super diligent with the brushing and flossing.

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