Heartbroken, Heartmended
26 February 2023 01:29 pmThat's how long I'm missing. My memory, not just of the arrest but of pretty much all of the day beforehand, is just gone. If I struggle, I can pick up impressions of being in the hospital for that first week... the rough image of my parents being there, but I have no real idea or context for it. April's said I was looping, with the loop gradually extending, which makes sense. The first concrete memory I have is talking with Dr. Grubb on the Friday.
I remember after that. I remember who came to visit and what we talked about; I remember what I listened to and what books I read and what games I played. I remember the crushing boredom, the food — better, certainly, than it used to be, but something I started to dread after about day 3 — the feeling of trying to get to sleep despite the beeping and snoring and general level of sound. The hope when talking to a doctor that something would happen, the despair when it then didn't.
But that two weeks (and yes, I'm rounding up, I'm allowed) is just as missing as anything else. It's two weeks that I was totally disconnected from my life. The only time I left the ward was to go for x-rays or MRI scans or surgery; the rest of the time I had to be there so the heart monitor would alert people if anything happened. I joked about feeling like a lifer, but the longest anyone else was on the ward was 8 days. I was there for 18.
I'm home now, but that feeling of missing time is still there. I've to "take it easy" for a couple of weeks, not do much beyond gentle exercise for at least 6 more. My flat, looked after by wonderful people, still feels a little bit unreal; packages on the floor that arrived while I was in, things not quite where I would have put them. I'm not in the least complaining! It's wonderful that I have such marvellous friends and chosen family (take a bow, April, Jane, Andrew, Paj, and Carrie-anne) who looked after it and cleaned it probably more than I have in years to give me a sanctuary to come home to.
Even something as simple as 'going outside' remains significant. I don't want to do a lot of things for the first time on my own — I don't know what the hell I'm going to feel going round Lidl for the first time, or wandering down the road to a park, and isn't that just the weirdest thing?
I'm looking forwards to my normal life feeling normal again. But it's probably going to take at least three more weeks until I get there.
I'm glad I have a good therapist.