My twelve-year-old daughter complained of severe pain in her jaw, and I decided to take her to the dentist; but the moment the doctor examined her, he suddenly said, “Stay calm, I am calling the police immediately” 😲😱
My daughter complained of intense pain in her jaw almost every day. She was only twelve, but she had already stopped eating normally, woke up at night from the pain, and cried quietly into her pillow so no one would hear.
I saw how carefully she chewed, how afraid she was to open her mouth even a little, how she held her cheek when she thought I wasn’t looking. My husband brushed it off. Irritated, he said it was “just her age,” that they were only baby teeth, that all children go through this and that it would pass with time. But inside me, a growing sense of anxiety would not let me rest.
I didn’t believe my husband; I felt he was hiding something. The pain was too strong, the fear in my child’s eyes too real.
And one day, waiting until my husband left for work, I quietly dressed my daughter, put her in the car, and drove her to the dentist. She sat beside me, gripping the seatbelt and trying not to cry, but with every bump in the road her face twisted in pain.
At the clinic, the doctor was confused at first. He examined her carefully, asked questions, asked her to open her mouth wider, but my daughter couldn’t — it hurt too much.

She writhed in the chair, breathing in short, uneven breaths, her fingers gripping the armrests tightly. Then the doctor switched on the overhead light, leaned closer, and began examining the inflamed gum more thoroughly. His movements suddenly became slower and more cautious, and his face grew tense.
He carefully took an instrument and, with an almost imperceptible motion, removed something dark from the gum. Then the doctor straightened up, looked at me, and said quietly but very clearly, “Stay calm. I am calling the police immediately.” 😨😱 When I learned what was really happening to my child, I was horrified. Continuation in the first comment 👇👇
Inside was a small black object, about the size of a grain, irregular in shape, jagged on one side, as if the casing of something had been shattered.
Within this dark fragment, part of a broken tooth was clearly visible. My daughter screamed in pain, and my legs nearly gave way.
Later, already in another office, everything became clear. It was not “age” and not “baby teeth.” It turned out that the tooth had been broken by a violent blow. And it was my husband who had done it, supposedly because our daughter had behaved badly.
The remaining part of the tooth had splintered and lodged deep in the gum, where a slow, agonizing, and destructive inflammatory process had begun. The pain that prevented my daughter from eating and sleeping was the result of that blow.
When the truth came out, I found it hard to breathe. Every detail came together into a terrifying picture that made you want to scream.


