LizzieMaine
Bartender
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Perfect orthodontically-correct teeth are a prominent class marker in the US, at least since the 1980s. I didn't know any kids with braces when I was growing up -- I only ever saw them on television, and didn't understand what it was all about -- so I, and all the kids I knew, grew up with our natural crooked and oddly-spaced teeth, just like our parents and our grandparents (at least those who still had teeth -- my mother had lost a big chunk of her lowers to an infection when she was in her 20s, and would lose them all by her mid-forties.)
But the mass marketing of orthodontia over the past half-century or so has made "bad teeth" a sign of a poor upbringing, and therefore something that will "hold you back in life," so it's rare to come across a kid who hasn't worn braces at some point. Even we adults who grew up crooked and are beyond caring about it, get the orthodontic sales pitches when all we want is a cleaning.
But the mass marketing of orthodontia over the past half-century or so has made "bad teeth" a sign of a poor upbringing, and therefore something that will "hold you back in life," so it's rare to come across a kid who hasn't worn braces at some point. Even we adults who grew up crooked and are beyond caring about it, get the orthodontic sales pitches when all we want is a cleaning.