Tuesday, 14 July 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You have done this ten thousand times and you will do it ten thousand more and you have never once stopped to see the strangeness of it.

The toothbrush goes into your mouth. Bristles against enamel. Your hand moves in small circles — back molars, front teeth, the inside surfaces your tongue touches all day without thinking. Two minutes. Sometimes less. The paste foams. You spit. You rinse. You are clean.

But stand back for a moment. Pretend you have never seen this before.

A human animal stands in a tiled room holding a small stick with fibres at one end. He has applied a paste — ground minerals, detergents, flavouring agents, compounds designed to remineralize the calcium phosphate matrix of his teeth. He is scrubbing the thirty-two bones that protrude from his jaw. He does this because millions of bacteria live in his mouth, feeding on the sugars from his last meal, secreting acids that will dissolve those bones if he does nothing. So twice a day, every day, he stands here and manually removes the film they build.

He has been doing this since he was a child. Forty years of brushing. Thirty thousand repetitions, give or take. And in all that time, how many moments has he actually been present for it? How many times has he noticed what his hand is doing, what the bristles feel like, what is actually happening inside his mouth?

The truth is: almost never. Brushing teeth is the thing you do while thinking about the next thing. While planning the day. While reviewing yesterday’s conversation. While running through your task list. While being anywhere but here, in this small room, doing this small thing that keeps your teeth from rotting out of your head.

But the body is here. The hand is moving. The work is being done. And if you stop — if you actually stop and pay attention — the ordinary becomes impossible.

Your hand is holding a tool. Your fingers have wrapped around the handle without being told how to grip. The pressure is exactly right — firm enough to control the brush, light enough not to crush it. Your hand knows this. Your hand has always known this. But how? How does the hand know how much force is enough?

The brush is moving in patterns. Small circles on the molars. Side-to-side on the front teeth. An angle against the gum line. You are not thinking about these patterns. You are not consulting a manual. You learned this decades ago and your hand remembers. Your hand is doing geometry in real time, adjusting angle and pressure and speed for each surface, and you are not managing any of it. You are just there while it happens.

The tongue is helping. Moving out of the way when the brush needs access to the inner surfaces. Checking the work, running over the teeth to see what still feels rough, what still needs attention. The tongue is mapping your mouth in three dimensions, sensing texture too subtle for your fingers to feel, reporting back to the brain which zones need another pass. And you did not ask it to do this. It just does it. It has always done it.

The saliva is responding. Glands under your tongue and in your cheeks releasing fluid to help move the paste around, to dilute the foam, to begin the process of neutralizing the acids. Your mouth is producing exactly the amount of saliva you need. Not too much. Not too little. The salivary glands are reading signals from your nervous system and responding in real time. And you have never once thought about how much spit you need while brushing your teeth.

The jaw is stable. Your teeth are pressing against each other with just enough force to stay closed but not enough to clench. Your jaw muscles are holding your mandible in position while your hand moves the brush. Your head is tilted slightly forward over the sink so the foam can drip out instead of running down your chin. Your neck muscles are supporting the weight of your skull at this exact angle. And you are not telling any of these muscles what to do. They are just doing it.

Your eyes are watching your hand in the mirror. Tracking the movement. Giving you feedback about where the brush is, how much paste is left, whether you have missed a spot. But you are not looking at your teeth. You are looking at the reflection of your teeth. Your brain is reversing the image in real time so that when you move your hand right, the reflection moves right, and you know where your hand actually is in space. This is not simple. This is extraordinary. And you do it without thinking every single morning.

The water is running. You bent forward. You cupped your hand. You filled your palm with water and brought it to your mouth. Your lips formed a seal. You drew the water in. You swished it around. You spat it out. And every part of this required your body to solve problems you do not even recognize as problems. How much to cup the hand. How fast to lift it. How to seal the lips. How to create negative pressure to draw the water in. How to move the water around the mouth without swallowing it. How to contract the cheeks and tongue to force it back out.

A child learns this over months. Spills water down their chin dozens of times before the body figures out the sequence. But you have not spilled in decades. The sequence is automatic now. Bend, cup, fill, lift, seal, rinse, spit. The body knows.

And now you are rinsing the brush. Holding it under the stream, using your thumb to push the bristles back and forth so the paste washes out. You are cleaning the tool you just used to clean yourself. And tomorrow you will use it again. And the day after. And it will work because you took these ten seconds to maintain it.

You are putting the brush back in the cup. Your hand knows where the cup is without looking. Your fingers release at exactly the right moment. The brush drops two inches and lands upright. You did not measure the distance. You did not calculate the trajectory. Your brain did all of that in the background while you were thinking about breakfast.

The whole thing took three minutes. Maybe less. And in those three minutes, your body coordinated hundreds of muscles. Fired thousands of neurons. Made ten thousand micro-adjustments to pressure, angle, position, force. Processed sensory input from your hands, your mouth, your eyes, your sense of balance. Managed saliva production. Maintained your posture. Kept you breathing. Kept your heart beating. Kept you standing upright while your attention was somewhere else.

And you did none of it consciously. It just happened. The way it happens every morning. The way it will happen tomorrow.

But it did not have to happen. Your hands could have stopped working. Your jaw could have refused to open. Your eyes could have gone dark. Your balance could have failed. Any one of a thousand small systems could have broken and the simple act of brushing your teeth would have become impossible.

But they did not break. They worked. They are still working. And tomorrow morning you will stand in front of the mirror again and your hand will reach for the brush and your body will do this thing it has done ten thousand times before and you will not think about it and it will still be a miracle.