Oh sweetie! What the heck? First your teeth, then the tailbone!?!?! How did you break your tailbone???
Just hearing about your bad luck brings back all kinds of painful memories as I've done both. When I was a kid I was riding a bike without a seat. My brothers had taken it off and lost the bolt to hold it on, so it was just the pipe sticking up that the seat connected to. I was going along and hit a huge hole and got that dang pipe rammed where the sun don't shine. I was to scared to tell my parents, so I suffered thru days of pain and could barely walk. When I finally told my mom and she took me to the doc they said that it had already started to heal together crookedly and the only way to fix it was to re-break it. We opted to just leave it. But when I gave birth to my first baby it got re-broken and straightened out just from pushing the baby out. OUCH! I couldn't sit or walk for over a week again!
I also busted off my 2 front teeth in 2 seperate incedents when I was a kid. They wouldn't cap them until I was over 18 because they said my mouth was still growing. So I had these temporary teeth built onto the stumps. But the material they used turned gray over time and I had to go in every year to have the inside drilled out, bleached, then closed up again. After college when I had a good paying job I finally forked out the money ($500 for each tooth) to get them permanently capped. It only lasted a year and they started giving me trouble, hurting and my whole face would swell up. Turned out that there was a hairline crack up the lenth of the root of one of the broken teeth. Over the years food and stuff worked its way up along that crack and caused a cyst to form. The cyst would get absessed, but it could drain thru the crack in the tooth, so didn't cause me too much trouble over the years, but when I got my teeth capped it closed off the opening in the crack so it couldn't drain any more. The cyst, along with the infection I ended up getting from it cause my upper jaw bone (not sure what the right term for that is) to deteriorate. By the time they went to fix it I ended up losing 1 tooth (fell out because there was no bone to hold it in place) and 2 or 3 others were in danger of being lost for the same reason. So I had to have surgery to have bone from a cadaver implanted into my mouth to build up what had been lost due to the cyst so that I wouldn't lose any more teeth. They had trouble getting the gums to grow back down over the new bone, so they ended up cutting a chunk out of the back part of the roof of my mouth to transplant it to the front.
Needless to say I didn't smile for almost a year thru this whole mess, and wouldn't talk unless I had my hand in front of my face so no one would see how horrible my mouth/teeth looked as I went thru the process of getting everything fixed.
I hope and pray that your teeth don't give you all the trouble that mine have.
Feel better soon hun!