Things My Mother Forgot to Mention

A Dentist Walks Into Our Podcast with Dr. Zakary Yermolenko

47 min · 18. juni 2026
episode A Dentist Walks Into Our Podcast with Dr. Zakary Yermolenko cover

Description

We've all had a dental horror story or two, and after sharing ours in a recent episode, we figured it was time to bring in an actual expert. This week we're joined by Dr. Zakary Yermolenko, a general dentist, Army Reserve major, and owner of Vernon Valley Dentistry in New Jersey, who somehow also finds time to coach his five-year-old's soccer team. Dr. Zak has a lot to say about what we're getting wrong, what we're finally getting right, and why "I don't have any pain" is not the green light we think it is. He also drops a few things we genuinely had never heard before, which, honestly, is exactly why we're here. Here's some of what we cover: * Why no pain absolutely does not mean no problem (he compares it to high blood pressure, and it lands) * The gold standard for home care, and why an electric toothbrush might actually be worth it * What tooth resorption is, and why Jan had a surprise diagnosis on a tooth that already had a root canal and crown * How diet, stress, and even sleep apnea can show up in your mouth before anywhere else * The concept of "premedication" before dental work, and why it matters if you've had any kind of joint replacement or surgery * Why dental anxiety is so common, and what a trauma-informed dentist actually looks like * What to look for when choosing a new dentist, beyond just Google reviews * How the mouth is the most sensitive part of the body (look up "homunculus" and prepare to be fascinated) Dr. Zak's whole approach is built around prevention, communication, and actually listening to his patients. He doesn't want to do more work than necessary; he wants you to not need it. That philosophy came through in everything he said, and we think it's a really refreshing way to think about dental care and honestly, about healthcare in general. If you've been putting off going to the dentist or feel like nobody ever really explained any of this to you, this episode is going to feel very overdue. About Dr. Zakary Yermolenko Dr. Zakary Yermolenko is a general dentist and owner of a family practice known as Vernon Valley Dentistry. He is a Major in the US Army Reserve, where he serves as a general dentist as well. He is married with two children, and the family has two dogs, two cats, and ten chickens. He enjoys watching, playing, and coaching soccer. Dr. Zak's Website [Vernonvalleydentistry.com] Find resources mentioned in this episode here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/resources/]. Learn more about this podcast here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/]. Submit your 90-second lesson/experience here [https://www.speakpipe.com/ThingsPodcast]. Apply to be a guest here [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5Z7epJjcjK4W0xLiG6g1DcZZFWrejsNNokPmbrbB__6axFA/viewform?usp=sharing]. Stay updated on new episodes here [https://bizmagic.kit.com/things-podcast]. *Information shared on this podcast is not medical advice. If you have a concern about your physical or mental health, please seek support from a proessional.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Things My Mother Forgot to Mention community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

30 episodes

episode Mushrooms, MDMA, and Mental Health: Our Personal Stories artwork

Mushrooms, MDMA, and Mental Health: Our Personal Stories

In this episode, we go a new direction that some people may feel uncomfortable with, but we feel is an important conversation. We talk about drugs. Specifically, psychedelics, and what they've meant for mental health, including our own. We share our personal stories, dig into some research, and have the kind of conversation we probably should have had with someone years ago. This isn't a "just say no" episode, and it's not a "do whatever you want" episode either. It's a real, honest look at what these substances are, what they can do, and why intention matters more than most people realize. Here's what we get into: * The history of psychedelic research and why it went underground for decades * What the latest clinical trials are actually showing for depression and PTSD * Patti's personal experiences with MDMA and psilocybin, and the lasting shifts they left behind * Jan's experiences, which were considerably less transformational and considerably more fun * The line between self-medicating and self-growth (and why it's worth knowing the difference) * Ketamine therapy, what it is and who it's helping * Where to start if you're curious and want to learn more before deciding anything We are not here to tell you what to do. We are here to have the conversation nobody had with us, so you can make informed, intentional choices for yourself. Find resources mentioned in this episode here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/resources/]. Learn more about this podcast here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/]. Submit your 90-second lesson/experience here [https://www.speakpipe.com/ThingsPodcast]. Apply to be a guest here [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5Z7epJjcjK4W0xLiG6g1DcZZFWrejsNNokPmbrbB__6axFA/viewform?usp=sharing]. Stay updated on new episodes here [https://bizmagic.kit.com/things-podcast]. *Information shared on this podcast is not medical advice. If you have a concern about your physical or mental health, please seek support from a proessional.

2. juli 202642 min
episode A Dentist Walks Into Our Podcast with Dr. Zakary Yermolenko artwork

A Dentist Walks Into Our Podcast with Dr. Zakary Yermolenko

We've all had a dental horror story or two, and after sharing ours in a recent episode, we figured it was time to bring in an actual expert. This week we're joined by Dr. Zakary Yermolenko, a general dentist, Army Reserve major, and owner of Vernon Valley Dentistry in New Jersey, who somehow also finds time to coach his five-year-old's soccer team. Dr. Zak has a lot to say about what we're getting wrong, what we're finally getting right, and why "I don't have any pain" is not the green light we think it is. He also drops a few things we genuinely had never heard before, which, honestly, is exactly why we're here. Here's some of what we cover: * Why no pain absolutely does not mean no problem (he compares it to high blood pressure, and it lands) * The gold standard for home care, and why an electric toothbrush might actually be worth it * What tooth resorption is, and why Jan had a surprise diagnosis on a tooth that already had a root canal and crown * How diet, stress, and even sleep apnea can show up in your mouth before anywhere else * The concept of "premedication" before dental work, and why it matters if you've had any kind of joint replacement or surgery * Why dental anxiety is so common, and what a trauma-informed dentist actually looks like * What to look for when choosing a new dentist, beyond just Google reviews * How the mouth is the most sensitive part of the body (look up "homunculus" and prepare to be fascinated) Dr. Zak's whole approach is built around prevention, communication, and actually listening to his patients. He doesn't want to do more work than necessary; he wants you to not need it. That philosophy came through in everything he said, and we think it's a really refreshing way to think about dental care and honestly, about healthcare in general. If you've been putting off going to the dentist or feel like nobody ever really explained any of this to you, this episode is going to feel very overdue. About Dr. Zakary Yermolenko Dr. Zakary Yermolenko is a general dentist and owner of a family practice known as Vernon Valley Dentistry. He is a Major in the US Army Reserve, where he serves as a general dentist as well. He is married with two children, and the family has two dogs, two cats, and ten chickens. He enjoys watching, playing, and coaching soccer. Dr. Zak's Website [Vernonvalleydentistry.com] Find resources mentioned in this episode here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/resources/]. Learn more about this podcast here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/]. Submit your 90-second lesson/experience here [https://www.speakpipe.com/ThingsPodcast]. Apply to be a guest here [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5Z7epJjcjK4W0xLiG6g1DcZZFWrejsNNokPmbrbB__6axFA/viewform?usp=sharing]. Stay updated on new episodes here [https://bizmagic.kit.com/things-podcast]. *Information shared on this podcast is not medical advice. If you have a concern about your physical or mental health, please seek support from a proessional.

18. juni 202647 min
episode The Messy Reality of Leaving a Long-Term Relationship artwork

The Messy Reality of Leaving a Long-Term Relationship

This week we got into something we know almost everyone has struggled with: what it actually takes to walk away from a long-term relationship. We both share our personal experiences of leaving long relationships, including the whys, the good and bad things, and the parts we felt less than proud of. Here's what we dig into: * Why "just cut it off and let go" is terrible advice when you've shared half your life with someone * The difference between leaving because you're afraid to be alone and leaving because you've outgrown the relationship * How addiction becomes a person's "first love," and why their choices were never about your worth * The myth that you have to be fully healed before you're allowed to be in a relationship * Why staying together "for the kids" usually backfires (they absorb everything, every time) * Jan playing devil's advocate on marriage and commitment, and Patti the self-described commitment-aphobe meeting her halfway * The reframe that helped Patti most: what if this is as good as it gets, and you stopped waiting for permission to be okay anyway The throughline is simple and a little maddening: love is not something you have, it's something you keep doing. And if you're struggling, get help. There is zero shame in it. Find resources mentioned in this episode here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/resources/]. Learn more about this podcast here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/]. Submit your 90-second lesson/experience here [https://www.speakpipe.com/ThingsPodcast]. Apply to be a guest here [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5Z7epJjcjK4W0xLiG6g1DcZZFWrejsNNokPmbrbB__6axFA/viewform?usp=sharing]. Stay updated on new episodes here [https://bizmagic.kit.com/things-podcast]. *Information shared on this podcast is not medical advice. If you have a concern about your physical or mental health, please seek support from a proessional.

4. juni 202644 min
episode Mama Trauma with Stephanie Baker artwork

Mama Trauma with Stephanie Baker

In this episode, we're joined by Stephanie Baker, a licensed trauma counselor, Army veteran, and EMDR therapist who knows firsthand that birth doesn't always go according to plan. What started as a near-perfect pregnancy took a sharp turn, and what followed was a crash course in things nobody had prepared her for. Jan also pulls back the curtain on her own birth story, one she rarely shares. Let's just say it involved more than one emergency, more than one surgery, and a phone call from her mother that was... a lot. We laugh. We wince. We say "oh my God" a lot. Because sometimes that's the only appropriate response. Here's what we covered: * The warning signs during pregnancy that are easy to dismiss as normal * The grief of losing the birth experience you planned for, and why that grief is valid * Why guilt and shame sneak in even when none of it was your fault * The isolation that can come after a complicated birth, and why community matters more than most people realize * How to choose your birth team and actually feel safe with them * Doulas, breastfeeding pressure, and asking for help without feeling like a burden * The generational thread of moms who carried their own birth losses without ever having words for them Birth is wild, unpredictable, and body-hijacking, and someone really should have warned us. That's why we're here. About Stephanie: Stephanie Baker is a licensed trauma counselor and coach out of Mason, Ohio, who runs her own practice called Change Heals, where she helps clients untangle the kind of pain most of us were taught to just power through. She's a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor, EMDR-trained, an Army veteran who served in Iraq, and she's a certified trainer and a member of the leadership group at the Healing Our Core Issues Institute. If you've read Gifts from a Challenging Childhood, you've actually already met a piece of her work — one of her original techniques is in there, in the 2025 edition. So she's not just teaching the model. She's helping shape it. Stephanie is the therapist a lot of us wish we'd had earlier. She's deeply relational — human first, clinician second — and she shows up in the room as a real person, not a role. What she does so beautifully is help clients understand themselves in ways they were never given permission to before. The patterns, the protective parts, the why underneath the behavior — she helps her clients see all of it with curiosity instead of shame. She works with people healing developmental trauma — the stuff our mothers definitely forgot to mention- and she does it with humor, heart, and zero pretense. Stephanie’s Links: Stephanie’s Website [https://changeheals.com/] Intensive Workshops [https://changeheals.com/workshops] Stephanie’s Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/change_heals] Find resources mentioned in this episode here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/resources/]. Learn more about this podcast here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/]. Submit your 90-second lesson/experience here [https://www.speakpipe.com/ThingsPodcast]. Apply to be a guest here [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5Z7epJjcjK4W0xLiG6g1DcZZFWrejsNNokPmbrbB__6axFA/viewform?usp=sharing]. Stay updated on new episodes here [https://bizmagic.kit.com/things-podcast]. *Information shared on this podcast is not medical advice. If you have a concern about your physical or mental health, please seek support from a proessional.

21. maj 202655 min
episode Open Wide: Horror Stories From the Chair artwork

Open Wide: Horror Stories From the Chair

Teeth. The thing nobody warns you about until you're crying in the dental chair with half your face numb and a stranger drilling into your mouth for the third time that visit. This episode is Jan and Patti getting brutally honest about their dental horror stories—the bad dentists, the botched procedures, the money spent, and the hard-won lessons that came out the other side. Spoiler: we both came out stronger (and way more committed to flossing). What we get into this episode: * Jan's childhood dentist, who did fillings with zero Novocaine (yes, really) * Why the dentist's chair can trigger real anxiety and panic, especially if feeling trapped is your thing * Patti's multi-year nightmare with a dentist who was charming, attractive, and genuinely bad at his job * The very expensive lesson in people-pleasing and not trusting your gut * When to see a specialist vs. letting your general dentist handle it * Teeth grinding, Invisalign, and Jan's $12,000 smile glow-up * Medications, dry mouth, and tooth loss — something no one talks about enough * The real reason so many of us go years without seeing a dentist Bottom line? Trust your gut, get referrals from someone who's had real work done, and for the love of everything — brush and floss twice a day. Your future self will thank you. Find resources mentioned in this episode here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/resources/]. Learn more about this podcast here [https://thingsmymotherforgottomention.com/]. Submit your 90-second lesson/experience here [https://www.speakpipe.com/ThingsPodcast]. Apply to be a guest here [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5Z7epJjcjK4W0xLiG6g1DcZZFWrejsNNokPmbrbB__6axFA/viewform?usp=sharing]. Stay updated on new episodes here [https://bizmagic.kit.com/things-podcast]. *Information shared on this podcast is not medical advice. If you have a concern about your physical or mental health, please seek support from a proessional.

7. maj 202634 min