Untangling the Tooth that Wouldn’t Talk

By Dana Stovern
Written September 21, 2021
Paonia, Colorado


Who knew that so much was riding on a tooth?

In the middle of my first marriage, I cracked a lower back molar. At the time, I did not know that the stress of my life and being with an abusive partner were causing me to grind my teeth at night, putting my ivories at significant risk. Many mornings, I woke with achy jaw joints, not understanding why, until a dentist pinpointed the issue as he mitigated the tooth with a root canal and capped the molar with an expensive gold crown.

That was the beginning of a very long journey of awakening to the layered reality of my life that has taken me years, decades, to unravel. The journey has transpired through glorious awakenings of my psychic gifts, heartbreaking truths about my family, tremendous loss, fabulous adventures (especially in nature), uniquely unfolding connections with fellow journeyers, grueling emotional labor to heal embedded trauma, and adamantly persistent insistence to find my professional way in an unbelieving world. It’s been twenty-five years of never giving up on myself, even when the odds looked slimmer than a size zero model during Fashion Week in New York. When I look back now, I revel in the fact that I’m still surviving the chances that someone like me is still making it in the aftermath of this predominately toxic masculine world. It’s a miracle.

And all the while, this tooth, capped with a gold crown, has sat in the back of my mouth, perched on its throne with a revolving need for attention. Sometimes I forgot about it, but always, my tongue would find its way there to trace the semi-natural ridge and test the edge and the tooth base to see if it was still there. It was like I was reaching out to touch a buddy, wondering if I’d still find it, and always relieved when I did. What was it about this tooth?

There were times this tooth ached underneath, a phantom pain mysteriously waxing and waning in a way that none of my other teeth ever have. I see now that an energy was there, trying to work itself out in my body. Yet, all along, I’ve tried to ignore the deeper meanings of this tooth, never connecting the dots between the home of origin traumas with toxic patterning in my marriages. Never connecting the interminable secrets of un-mouthed words I had to keep for the relationships in my life to stay intact. I needed to stay safe and survive. I never made the connection between this cracked tooth holding up a crown and the silence of intimately embedded information that fishtailed around the root, hidden in my gums. That’s where a phantom but very real ache came and went for years.

Toning for Solstice

By Dana Stovern
December 29, 2017
Paonia, Colorado

It was springtime on the high rolling prairie south of the Weminuche Wilderness in Colorado’s southwest. It was that time of year when the Colorado blue sky could not be bluer. The white of the snow-capped mountains with triangular jags that met the blue could not cut the sky any sharper. The slate bluish-gray of the mountains below the white could not have given way more beautifully to the soft bud of green on the prairie — which could not be richer with the promise of summer, of growth ahead. The air, so cuttingly fresh without the bite of winter, gave life to this memory that I now write to you.

I was driving my red Chevy truck from our cabin on Florida Mesa, above the Animas River Valley, over the high rolling prairie to Ignacio, Colorado, the home of the Southern Ute Native American Indian Tribe. It was one of the richest, most brilliant springs I’ve ever experienced, and it was on the first-year anniversary of my near-death and the loss of our son. Maybe that’s why the pungent air moved through me and left such a memory because I was beginning to resurface from the numbness, the shock, and the forced movement of life one lives through during thick grief. The drive across the high rolling prairie that morning felt more like a promise and love of life than a forced burden of living after death and endings, of having to carry promises heartbreakingly unfulfilled.

I was on my way to meet with a fellow practitioner in Ignacio who was interested in selling her reiki table to me. At the time, I think I was interested in purchasing the table from her, but I wasn’t sure. The continued journey of my non-traditional career was unexpected, especially in the midst of the disaster of my life. It moved me like the subtle force of a wandering river, from psychic reader to spiritual coach and now to the unfathomable energy worker and potential healer.

It was something like a dandelion forcing itself between the cracks of rubble and taking root, leafing out, and singing its yellow goodness to the sun — not giving a care to anything else.

That’s what was happening inside of me. The will of whatever the flow of gift that wanted to come through me, at a most inopportune time, was merely taking its course of action — taking no notice of what I thought or felt. The impulses of the Universe did not care about my opinion. I was along for the ride. Literally.

I pulled my truck into a parking spot at the gleaming new casino that the Southern Ute Tribe had rebuilt in the last several years. My friend Mary Alyce and her business partner, Lisa, had a studio in the casino spa, housed just off the magnificent entryway of lodgepole columns, a bronze statue, a modern hotel, and the flashing lights of the casino. In stark contrast, on the other side of the parking lot was the also recently built Native American Indian Southern Ute Museum, housing an incredible iconic collection of tribal historical pieces.

Although I always felt the mystery and honor of driving into Ignacio, even that day, I had no way of knowing how the incredible gifts and spirit of the Southern Ute legacy would play in my life in the coming months and now years. I sense that what I write to you now is only a thread of a larger weave of fabric that I am helping to create. (And yes, I was given spiritual guidance and permission to share this sacred information that normally, I would keep in private protection.)