| From Neal Stephenson's
Cryptonomicon (Pages 776-781)
Wisdom. A few years ago, when Randy became tired of the ceaseless
pressure in his lower jaw, he went out onto the north-central Californian
oral-surgery market looking for someone to extract wisdom teeth. His
health plan covered this, so price was not an obstacle. His dentist took
one of those big cinemascopic wraparound X-rays of his entire lower head,
the kind where they pack your mouth with half a roll of high-speed film
and then clamp your head in a jig and the X-ray machine revolves around
you spraying radiation through a slit, as the entire staff of the
dentist’s office hits the deck behind a lead wall, resulting in a printed
image that is a none-too-appetizing distortion of his jaw into a single
flat plane. Looking at it, Randy eschewed cruder analogies like “head of a
man run over several times by steamroller while lying flat on his back”
and tried to think of it as a mapping transformation—just one more in
mankind’s long history of ill-advisedly trying to represent three-D stuff
on a flat plane. The corners of this coordinate plane were anchored by the
wisdom teeth themselves, which even to the dentally unsophisticated Randy
looked just a little disturbing in that each one was about the size of his
thumb (though maybe this was just a distortion in the coordinate
transform—like the famously swollen Greenland of Mercator) and they were
pretty far away from any other teeth, which (logically) would seem to put
them in parts of his body not normally considered to be within a dentist’s
purview, and they were at the wrong angle—not just a little crooked, but
verging on upside down and backwards. At first he just chalked all of this
up to the Greenland phenomenon. With his Jaw-map in hand, he hit the
streets of Three Siblings-land looking for an oral surgeon. It was already
beginning to work on him psychologically. Those were some big-ass teeth!
Brought into being by the workings of relict DNA strands from the hunter-
gatherer epoch. Designed for reducing tree bark and mammoth gristle to
easily digestible paste. Now these boulders of living enamel were
horrifyingly adrift in a gracile cro-magnon head that simply did not have
room for them. Think of the sheer extra weight he had been carrying
around. Think of the use that priceless head-real-estate could have been
put to. When they were gone, what would fill up the four giant
molar—shaped voids in his melon? It was moot until he could find someone
to get rid of them. But one oral surgeon after another turned him down.
They would put the X-ray up on their light boxes, stare into it and
blanch. Maybe it was just the pale light coining out of the light-boxes
but Randy could have sworn they were blanching. Disingenuously—as if
wisdom teeth normally grew someplace completely different—they all pointed
out that the wisdom teeth were buried deep, deep, deep in Randy’s head.
The lowers were so fir back in his jaw that removing them would
practically break the jawbone in twain structurally; from there, one fuse
move would send a surgical-steel demolition pick into his middle ear. The
uppers were so deep in his skull that the roots were twined around the
parts of his brain responsible for perceiving the color blue (on one side)
and being able to suspend one’s disbelief in bad movies (on the other) and
between these teeth and actual air, light and saliva lay many strata of
skin, meat, cartilage, major nerve-cables, brain-feeding arteries, bulging
caches of lymph nodes, girders and trusses of bone, rich marrow that was
working just fine thank you, a few glands whose functions were
unsettlingly poorly understood, and many of the other things that made
Randy Randy, all of them definitely filing into the category of sleeping
dogs. And so finally the big day came, and Randy took care to enjoy hi~ breakfast because he knew that, considering the nerve damage he was about to incur, this might be the last time in his life that he would be able to taste food, or even chew it. The oral surgeon’s minions all looked at Randy in awe when he actually walked in the door of their office, like My god he actually showed up! then flew reassuringly into action. Randy sat down in the chair and they gave him an injection and then the oral surgeon came in and asked him what, if anything, was the difference between Windows 95 and Windows NT. “This is one of these conversations the sole purpose of which is to make it obvious when I have lost consciousness, isn’t it?” Randy said. “Actually, there is a secondary purpose, which is that I am considering making the jump and wanted to get some of your thoughts about that,” the oral surgeon said. “Well,” said Randy, “I have a lot more
experience with UNIX than with NT, but from what I’ve seen, it appears
that NT is really a decent enough operating system, and certainly more of
a serious effort than Windows.” He paused to draw breath and then noticed
that suddenly everything was different. The oral surgeon and his minions
were still there and occupying roughly the same positions in his field of
vision as they had been when he started to utter this sentence, but now
the oral surgeon’s glasses were askew and the lenses misted with blood,
and his lace was all sweaty, and his mask flecked with tiny bits of stuff
that very much looked like it had come from pretty fir down in Randy’s
body, and the air in the room was murky with aerosolized bone, and his
nurses were limp and haggard and looked like they could use makeovers,
face- lifts, and weeks at the beach. Randy’s chest and lap, and the floor,
were littered with bloody wads and hastily tom-open medical supply
wrappers. The back of his head was sore from being battered against the
head-rest by the recoil of the young brilliant oral surgeon’s cranial
jack-hammer. When he tried to finish his sentence (“so if you’re willing
to pay the premium I think the switch to NT would be very well advised”)
he noticed that his mouth was jammed full of something that prevented
speech. The oral surgeon pulled his mask down off his face and scratched
his sweat-soaked beard. He was staring not at Randy but at a point very
far away. He heaved a bi~, slow sigh. His hands were shaking. “As I told you before,” the brilliant young oral surgeon said, “we charge for wisdom tooth extractions on a sliding scale, depending on the degree of difficulty.” He paused for a moment, groping for words. “In your case I’m afraid that we will be charging you the maximum on all four." Then he got up and shambled out of the room, weighed down, Randy thought, not so much by the stress of his job as by the knowledge that no one was ever going to give him a Nobel prize for what he had just accomplished. |