bad breath + interview?

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<p>Alcohol…</p>

<p>Dude. That’s like asking the kid in a wheelchair how he plays soccer.</p>

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<p>This looks like fun… like bumper cars:</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.xable.com/photos/news/3e285f504c9f291.jpeg[/url]”>http://www.xable.com/photos/news/3e285f504c9f291.jpeg&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Is it wrong that I want to try that? Badly?</p>

<p>^No. ;)</p>

<p>So OP, i’m curious… did your “problem” really matter that much?</p>

<p>you didnt hear??? there was a bioattack at the school the other day and an adcom remains in critical condition after inhaling poisonous fumes…</p>

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<p>like i said i have my interview this thursday. im training for it now. i dunno if listerine strips will work because i’ll have to keep putting them in lol. i think i’ll rinse with listerine before i go, and bring a water bottle to drink during the interview. do you think it’s bad to bring a water bottle?</p>

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<p>i don’t breathe through my mouth</p>

<p>oh just effing admit it- youre tongue has never tangoed with another’s</p>

<p>I actually find that eating something an hour before the interview helps more than just drinking a ton of water. Of course, stay away from the garlic knots, cheese, and what not but something simple like an apple tends to clear your breath and keep it nice. I usually get the bad-breath feeling if I haven’t eaten something for a few hours.</p>

<p>^banana works really well in my experience</p>

<p>see a doctor!!!</p>

<p>Im sorry but the description u gave made me bust out laughing!!!</p>

<p>just dont get close to their face!!lol!</p>

<p>why? i could save him a trip. you most likely have stubborn ****ing tonsil stones [YouTube</a> - tonsil stone removal tonsillolith removed](<a href=“http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FL1XxosGI0]YouTube”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FL1XxosGI0)</p>

<p>OH. I thought u meant this thursday. SOrry lol</p>

<p>Do keep us updated!</p>

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<p>***! im not getting my tonsils pulled. i practiced talking at different distances (didn’t brush teeth in the morning on purpose) with my friend today to test “the danger range.” it’s about a meter. gum eliminates everything but its rude during interviews. mint reduces danger range to about half a meter. gum before + water during interview works very well. ill keep you guys updated.</p>

<p>its not getting youre tonsils removed cheesyman. you have to remove these ****s yourself</p>

<p>A tonsillolith (also called tonsil stone, tonsillar debris, or calculus of the tonsilor “hack balls”) is a piece (or more commonly, a cluster) of calcareous matter which forms in the rear of the mouth, in the crevasses (called tonsillar crypts) of the palatine tonsils (which are what most people commonly refer to as simply tonsils).
Tonsil stones, it is theorized, are the result of a combination of any of the following:
dead white blood cells
oral bacteria
overactive salivary glands
Protruding tonsilloliths have the feel of a foreign object, lodged between the outside of wisdom teeth and the temporomandibular joint region of the fleshed jaw. They may be an especially uncomfortable nuisance, but are not often harmful. They are one possible cause of cheesemanbus’s halitosis.</p>

<p>^^Premed :)</p>

<p>Cheeseman, please see a doctor–you probably already have, but from your description this doesn’t seem to be just a mild case.</p>

<p>i had the interview today.</p>

<p>i thought i was doing pretty well until my interviewer excused himself while i was speaking (this was in starbucks), said, “sorry about this, i need to step outside quickly for some air,” and when he came in he resumed business as usual. uhhhh…what does this mean?! i made sure i swished listerine, brought 2 bottles of water and had a tiny unnoticeable piece of trident gum in my mouth. am i doomed for columbia!?</p>

<p>he really said he needed air?? </p>

<p>aww man, im sorry but he prob smelled ur breath! well interviews dont really matter that much!</p>

<p>…Dude, how lethal is your mouth?</p>