V. G. Anderson

V. G. Anderson is an author and freelance editor who spends all year chasing 70 degrees with a taco butler. Explore her work at VGAnderson.com.

How to Buy Teeth in Mexico

V. G. Anderson | Essay
"Dental Tourism” the brochure called it. “Save thousands of dollars,” it touted, tempting U.S. citizens to cross the southern border for affordable healthcare. My husband and I had been on the road for five years. The lingering fumes of adolescent optimism and solar panels propelled our travels in a vintage motorhome. Our first-world survival instincts were honed. We considered ourselves master scavengers, having streamlined the process of acquiring the necessities for life that most take for granted in North America. It's shocking how much time is involved to find potable water when it doesn’t flow freely from brushed chrome spigots strategically located throughout a 3 bed/2 bath living space. Next stop: the Florida Keys. With a 25-year-old engine, the last thing we expected to break our stride was candy addiction. His sweet tooth cracked, the next within days, another on the brink. Subtle but persistent pain followed, like a slow-rolling storm with spider-lightning on the horizon. Post-x-rays, local estimates put repair work nearing ten thousand dollars. “But I floss!” he bemoaned after every call for an estimate. Muddled news reports droned on in the background. Death tolls were rising in China from a virus called something that brought to mind a popular brand of beer. Many thought it’ll fizzle out by the time it gets here, like SARS. Still, “let’s review the flashcards,” pundits urged: Ebola; AIDS; The Black Plague. “Woah, now! Don’t go extremist on us,” politicians roared. Their monster truck-sized spring mud fling was just getting started. We booked our “dental tourism” adventure to “save thousands.” As the trip grew closer, confirmed Coronavirus cases on the West Coast increased, followed by reports of deaths from “unknown causes” all over the country. News stations scrambled to give viewers updates that wouldn’t ruffle bald eagle feathers, while our neighbor, a retired Marine, reportedly repaired his teeth with epoxy. We were Mexico bound. The “shuttle