That thing you don’t want to do, but really need to do

All of us have fears, rational or irrational, that allow us to avoid things we really should not avoid. I am thankful that I got around that pattern and went ahead to take a cardiac stress test. I wanted to share my experience, for the simple reason that I am convinced it could save someone’s life.Having failed said stress test (which I will here readily admit I really didn’t study for), it was now on to bigger and better things: the dreaded cardiac catheterization. I asked a lot of people about it and consistently got the reply that it’s no big deal. So, off I went to St. Francis Hospital in Hartford. I went thinking it was no big deal. I should here reveal that I do have a family history of heart disease. My dad had quadruple-bypass surgery at age 77 and my mom had a bum heart, too. They lived to be 90 and 92 respectively, but, granted, with a lot of medication between them.Once at St. Francis (which I think is the best heart hospital in the world, by the way, but I may not be objective as they saved my life), they did do the cardiac catheterization, but it didn’t end there. My doctor came in and told me I needed bypass surgery: I could have it in a week or the next day. Well, there was no way in heck I was going to wait a week, you may well imagine, I wanted it now. Like really, now.So that is what they did. The next steps included the medical professionals shaving a lot of your body and finding veins to use for the bypass. I guess they were able to harvest veins for the heart, and I guess the operation went well, because after all, I’m able to write this right now. All this happened within the past month, so I am still recovering but doing better all the time. One thing that became clear is that it’s a smaller world than one may think. One interesting experience in the hospital happened when I was having a little procedure done by a great nurse, and we started talking, and I said I was from Cornwall. She said her dad worked in Sharon and I said what does he do? He’s a cardiologist, and he just happened to be my cardiologist. It is my firm belief that she was the best nurse St. Francis has, and that’s what I told her dad the other day. I asked her if she was going to tell him about our meeting and she said she couldn’t, due to HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) regulations, with which I disagree. I believe we should be more open about our health care, so maybe people wouldn’t be so afraid of tests and life-saving procedures. The aftermath, now that I’m home? They had to adjust my medications that I guess keep me alive, although it’s a real bummer having to give up cranberry juice, hopefully that’s just temporary. Actually the whole ordeal was less painful than having a tooth pulled, and now I just have to be a patient patient, at least until July 10, when I can fully go back to doing all the things I was doing before the stress test.The one plus side to this is I’m not allowed to shovel snow, ever. I guess the wife gets to do that.But all kidding aside, I really want to emphasize the profound importance of having a stress test if you’re over 50 years old. It’s just not a big deal, and the alternative can be fatal.Richard Griggs lives in Cornwall, and can be found at the Cornwall Farm Market most any Saturday in season.

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