Dentists
will come across all different types of patients throughout their careers. One of the most unique patients would be
someone that swallows swords as a profession!
Dan Meyer was introduced to the world on America’s Got Talent, and he
did an interview to answer a few questions about his strange talent!
“Q: How
did you get involved in sword swallowing?
A: I first witnessed sword
swallowing as a child at circus sideshows and did not believe it was real. It
wasn't until I was working as a Lutheran missionary in India at the age 20 that
I witnessed sword swallowers on the street in a village in south India, where
it originated over 4,000 years ago. There is a progression to learning the
sideshow arts. Like many other sword swallowers, I started by learning
juggling, then stilt walking, unicycle riding, bed of nails, the human
blockhead, fire eating, glass eating, and then the final move to sword
swallowing in 1997 when I was living in Nashville. Sword swallowing is the
hardest of all of the sideshow arts. Twenty-nine
people have died swallowing swords over the past 150 years, and
there are less than a few dozen professional sword swallowers left actively
performing around the world today.
Q: How
do you learn this profession?
A: It often takes from 3-10 years
to learn to swallow a single sword, practicing multiple times a day, and some
people never learn. I spent four years practicing 10 to 12 times per day for
over four years, a total of almost 13,000 unsuccessful attempts, until I got my
first sword down my throat (Feb. 12, 2001).
Q: Tell
me the pathway of the sword through your mouth.
A: I first lick the sword to lubricate
it with saliva, then put the sword in the mouth, overcome the gag reflex, and
find the proper alignment into the epiglottis, then flip open the epiglottis
and repress the peristalsis reflex in the throat (22 pairs of muscles in the
esophagus that swallow your food). I then pass the sword between the lungs,
nudge the heart to the left, pass through the diaphragm, and relax the lower
esophageal sphincter, slide the blade past my liver and kidneys and into the
stomach, and repress the retch reflex in the stomach.
Q: Have
you ever injured your mouth, tongue or throat?
A: I have had several minor
injuries and a few serious injuries requiring hospitalization. As president of
the Sword Swallowers Association International (SSAI -- www.swordswallow.org), we learn of about
4-8 serious sword swallowing injuries that require hospitalization each year,
with more that go unreported. In 2005 I had my worst injury while swallowing
five swords at once in Alabama. I had previously swallowed seven swords the
week before, but this time, while the swords were in my stomach, my stomach
retched and I punctured the opening to my stomach on the sword tips. When you
sustain an injury like this, you can't just slap a bandaid on it. I woke up in
the middle of the night and couldn't breathe as I had fluids around my lungs
and heart, so I ended up going to the emergency room. Recovery was three weeks
of bedrest, antibiotics, and fasting on a water diet for about three weeks. For
most sword swallowing injuries, doctors often prescribe an IV drip with
antibiotics for about three weeks until the injury heals. That's the only way
an injury like this can heal. If you get bacteria in the wound, you can die
from peritonitis infection within 24 hours. In 2010, I perforated my upper
esophagus while swallowing two swords underwater in a tank for the Guinness
World Records TV in Rome. I currently hold 22 world records, including five
Guinness World Records and three Ripley's Believe It or Nots and perform in
about 20 countries around the world each year. For more info: www.swordswallower.net.
Q: Do
you sterilize your mouth or sword before performing?
A: No. Most sword swallowers
simply lubricate the blade with saliva. We also don't rinse with antiseptic
because it can numb the throat, and it is very important that we are able to
feel the placement and alignment of where the sword goes in the esophagus and
epiglottis. I do sterilize my swords with rubbing alcohol before and after
performance because I let audience members touch the blades to verify they are
real.
Q: Do
you have any dietary precautions before swallowing a sword?
A: I eat a full meal three hours before performing in order to
fill and stretch my stomach. I also drink lots of water; this makes the stomach
hang a little lower and it's easier to insert the swords into the stomach. It
is extremely difficult to swallow a sword on an empty stomach at 6 a.m. when
the esophagus and stomach are tight and shriveled up.”(Connelly D.D.S.)
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