Do you remember when suddenly it became a big deal whether your breath smelled bad or not? Did it have something to do with puberty?
I remember my sixth grade Social Studies teacher, Mr. Schwartz, was the first "close talker" I ever met. He would almost pull me to him to let me know something in confidence. (Why he needed to confide in a twelve year old is another story.) Mr. Schwartz's main problem was that he was most probably a three-pack-a-day smoker. In those days, teachers would disappear in-between classes to puff down an entire cigarette in a five minute period. & even though virtually every member of my family at that time smoked, I was astonished when he would come close to me, talk in low tones, & his breath smelled as bad as his teeth were yellow.
Being an ugly & fat child, I didn't get to play the boy-girl games of puberty & anyway I did my best to keep myself inconspicuous & out of trouble. But I think it was some time in eighth grade when someone spat out that damning word for the first time in my life: halitosis. It's a word that sounds as bad as it is. It was probably in my Home Economics class (a class I took because at the end of the school year you learned how to make a pizza) when some of the more popular guys I sat next to complained of some dude who had halitosis. They had discovered this fact not because they themselves noticed, but because a girl had complained about it when she kissed him.
I knew at that point I would never ever never kiss a girl.
Whether or not I myself had bad breath I couldn't say. I didn't have cigarette breath, that was true. But at the time I definitely didn't have terribly good dental hygiene, which is the easiest way to guarantee decent-smelling breath. In my favor, however, was the fact that my family ate bland, white European food, with the most daring spice being salt, so I didn't smell of garlic or curry or anything like that. But I drank a lot of soda, & ate a lot of crap junk food. Chances are, I didn't have breath that smelled of posies.
None of it mattered, of course - I didn't have friends with whom I whispered all the time, & when I was finally able to communicate with the opposite sex, I would be talking to girls who weren't quite as shallow as the boys in my Home Ec class.
What they - or the boys in middle school, or even my friends - said about my breath behind my back is another thing entirely, & something I am not privy to.
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