PRACTISE MAKES PERFECT

All in all the palette may or may not develop an ‘acquired taste’ to certain types of flavour, “nothing in life is guaranteed with regard to Human Biology”. The tongue scraped hygienically will harness taste and set the buds free. Bitter, Sweet, Sour, Salt or Umami are the five basic tastes to bear in mind when eating food stuff. The reason the subject of five taste senses has been brought to your attention is because looking after the tongue will give efficiency during the process of life we sometimes take for granted namely, eating and drinking. (See Chapter 2 “scrape the tongue”). If we learn to expand our range of thought, we begin to explode into new territories called “proper care dimensions”. ‘Little White Teeth’ may well only be ‘a book about teeth’ dear reader, however, on the same note isn’t a book supposed to be lighter than a teacher? Practise makes perfect is often quoted and mentioned in the field of personal hygiene with relation to parenting and child development, let us look at this a second as an offshoot subject matter for children’s literature. Being cool about limitations is a valuable lesson to ponder... as we all know being responsible adults is important; so to is enjoyment for youth progression. Practise makes perfect. (I for one haven’t practised enough but I am learning).


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