He did say the sonic tooth brush is the real deal. By the way, I love your word of the day. Are those randomly generated, or do you select them yourself? Might I suggest for tomorrow the word, "ubiquitination?"
Another thing worth mentioning is, if you are starting to develop sensitivity along the gumline, switching to a natural toothpaste that does not contain sodium laurel sulfate or sodium laureth sulfate could solve the problem. SLS and SLES are inexpensive foaming agents, but they are also irritants. I was developing pretty bad sensitivity, but it all went away when I swithed to Jason natural toothpaste.
Or you could switch to non-natural tooth pastes such as sensidyne. I just cant use the Toms of Maine products or the Jason products. I had a friend my first year of school and he used to rant about how all the products cause cancer so he only uses natural toms of maine tooth paste and deoderant. I dont know if he just had bad hygene or what but his breath always stunk and he always smelled funny. As for the word or fact of the day, its just whatever random word I pick out of my notes that I'm studying that day.
The problem with Sensodyne is that it uses SLS as its foaming agent, which makes it a contradictory product. :whacky011
Sensydine addresses other issues with hypersensitivity. Actual hypersensitivity of the nerve within the tooth, not the gums. But I dont have that problem. My mother does and she uses it and says it works. Well what kind of mouth wash do you use RWB?
Yes, cold process soap with the ingredients slightly altered that I make with mint. I like the fact that I don't get that "cotton mouth" in the morning anymore.
Not seeing that in your product line. Do you have it for sale, or are you wary of selling it for ADA-type reasons?
Well, you can give some this way. Seriously, have you ever thought of adding it to your store? Or your Vapo-Rub type stick thing you sent me? You can't hold out on us, ya know?
I've thought of adding it to my store, but I need to think of a different name. "Tooth soap" is actually trademarked.