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Meet Cosmetic Dentist Edilia Glenski
A little boy with severe tooth decay made it clear to Edilia Glenski
that she had chosen the right profession. She had always known she
wanted to do something medical-related and had several relatives who
were doctors who suggested the field of doctoring. But she wasn’t quite
sure it was for her. Then college friends who were pursuing dentistry at
the University of
Florida
convinced her to go to dental school and soon after, a 12-year-old boy
ignited her passion for dentistry.
As part of her training
in dental school, Edilia was practicing in an impoverished area of
Florida, caring for people who had never seen a dentist. She saw over
and over how poor oral health can affect a person’s overall health and
the quality of their life. The boy especially tugged at her heartstrings
and became “my project. Every single tooth in his mouth was decayed down
to the gum line. He basically had no teeth.”
Edilia worked on his
back teeth first – so he could chew food. While he was enormously
grateful to have back teeth, she noticed that he never smiled. Then she
fixed his front teeth, using the same method as she had for his other
teeth – rebuilding them with filling material, basically hand sculpting
his entire mouth. “He started to smile and in a short time his whole
personality changed. He was so grateful, he cried and cried.”
She was hooked. She had
never imagined how much difference she could make in people’s lives.
“They didn’t talk about that in dental school; it was all technical.”
That was also when she
decided to focus on cosmetic dentistry, even though at the time nobody
called it “cosmetic dentistry.” A fortunate time in the Navy after
college allowed her to get an unusually wide range of experience with
all kinds of dental conditions, including injuries – “much more
experience than if I had gone into private practice right after school.”
After serving in Asia and San Diego, she stayed in Calif. and practiced
cosmetic dentistry for 17 years.
In 2002, Edilia and her
family returned to her home state so they could be nearer her parents
and because “I missed Florida.” A rather energetic person, Edilia
recently completed 600 hours of advanced training at UF. “The profession
is moving so rapidly and there is so much new technology, if you just
get your CEUs each year, you fall behind. I don’t want to be left
behind.”
What with visiting her
parents in Lakeland, fixing up the house they bought after they moved
here, and continuing to build her Florida practice, Edilia really
doesn’t have much time off these days. But if she did, she would most
like to go boating, look at marine life and watch Florida’s wildlife,
which she loves. |