Still Alchemy

The Hidden Wisdom in Your Jaw


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Let's talk about something most of us have a visceral memory of — the swollen face, the ice pack, the painkillers after wisdom tooth surgery. We treat it as purely medical. A problem. Something the body got wrong. But what if there's something deeper happening?

In many healing traditions, every part of the body corresponds to something beyond the physical. Teeth are considered anchors of vitality — connected in Traditional Chinese Medicine to the kidney meridian, to foundational life force. And wisdom teeth arrive last, emerging in your late teens and early twenties, precisely when you're transitioning into adult consciousness. The body isn't failing. It's marking a threshold.

Shamanic traditions teach that teeth represent our capacity to hold on — to commit, to bite into life, to stand firm in what we believe. And here come new teeth at exactly the moment you're learning to do that for the first time on your own.

So what does it mean to keep them? If they come in cleanly, without crowding the others, some healers read that as a sign of spaciousness — that you have the capacity to hold more of life's complexity without it crushing what came before. Some traditions go further, treating wisdom teeth as vessels of ancestral memory, templates of how your lineage handled adulthood and survival.

But removal can be equally profound — if you're conscious about it. Wisdom teeth that grow sideways, pressing painfully against existing teeth? That's a metaphor worth sitting with. What belief, inherited from family or culture, is disrupting everything else you've built? The extraction becomes a ritual of intentional release. You are literally creating space in your own head.

Whether you keep them or remove them, the invitation is the same: be awake during the experience. Your wisdom teeth aren't just a dental issue. They're a question.

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Still AlchemyBy Still Alchemy