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How do you deal with the child's tooth loss?

You can learn an old saying that the upper teeth are thrown under the bed and the lower teeth are thrown on the roof. I heard that it can make teeth grow better. But changing teeth for the first time is the only time in a child's life that a tooth can grow back. It is a very meaningful thing, and parents can also choose to help him collect it. It is also a witness to keep it for children to see when they grow up, or to show it to children.

When I changed my teeth for the first time as a child, I was scared to death. At that time, I was timid. As soon as I saw my teeth moving, I dared not say anything. At that time, I thought it was because I ate too much sugar that my teeth could not move. I dare not tell my parents for fear that they will blame me for eating sugar, but I am particularly scared when I am alone. I'm alone, afraid to eat and say every day, scaring my mother to ask me what's wrong, but I just dare not say. I comforted myself at that time, as long as I didn't eat sugar, I would be fine after a while.

One day I was eating at home, and suddenly there was a bang when I was eating. I don't know what I bit in my mouth. My first reaction was that it was a stone, so I quickly spit it out. As a result, the rice in my mouth was still red with blood. I was scared to cry. Scared my parents into hugging me and asking me what was wrong. I opened my mouth and pointed to the empty gum that had fallen and said that my tooth had fallen out. I thought my parents would scold me, but I didn't expect them to laugh there. It turned out that at that time I had reached the age of changing my teeth. So the tooth fell out.

Now that I think about it, I felt so cute at that time, and then I was not afraid to change my teeth. My mother is a very careful person. She put away everything I grew up with, including the socks I wore when I was a child, the headband that tied my hair, and the little shoes that she and my grandmother made for me ... So she also took away my teeth. During the time when I changed my teeth, she told me not to lick my new teeth, and she also asked me to wrap my teeth in paper and take them back. She has a box of ebony with my teeth in it.

There is a small mark on each tooth, which says the date when it fell. She kept saying that she would keep it until I stopped living at home. I think it is a beautiful memory and a gift from my parents. It is also a memorable event for the children themselves. You can take it out when you are old and miss your child but the child has no time to come back, or show him these memories after the child has his own child, so that he can feel his parents and childhood.