Surprise! You’re sad.

Lately my feelings have been a jack-in-the-box. Life just keeps turning the crank, and I think I am keeping it all together until suddenly, when I least expect it, pop-goes-my feelings. Usually this happens in the quiet moments before sleep. You know that time, if you’re like me, is some of the only time in the day where you give your brain a moment to get quiet and wander. Wandering minds can be a dangerous thing for people who are trying really hard to keep their thoughts and feelings in check. Even more dangerous are sleeping minds, minds that are beyond our control completely, minds that do whatever they need to do to draw our attention to the issue that we are ignoring. 

Let’s start with Monday. Monday of this week I woke up with a thud, a jerk of my head and body that was so extreme I thought for sure I had just experienced a shock from my ICD. I was absolutely certain of it. It is not a fun way to wake up, but it also was not the first time I have been awoken like this. I did a body scan. My chest didn’t hurt. My heart rate felt normal. I grabbed the blood pressure cuff I keep on my bedside table (doesn’t everyone?) and took my pressure, low but in the normal range. My head hurt pretty badly, but other than that, everything felt normal. I text my sister. She was present the last time this happened. We talked it through and decided that I should probably be very sure before I attempted to go to work. I messaged my work, it was 5 a.m. the doctors wouldn’t be in for hours still and I was exhausted, a little freaked out, and did I mention my head hurt? 

When I woke up and only my head hurt I was pretty certain I had a phantom shock. A real shock would leave my body feeling much worse for the wear. I slowly get myself going, I took a long shower, ate breakfast, and got dressed. I waited, did another body scan (when I say this I just mean I spend a moment or two in silence really feeling how my body feels by concentrating my attention on different areas) I felt okay. No shock detected. Why do phantom shocks happen? “They found that the phenomenon primarily occurred in patients with a history of traumatic device shocks, depression, anxiety and PTSD. They conclude that memory reactivation of traumatic events seems to contribute in the pathogenesis of phantom shock.” Clin Cardiol, 1999, vol. 22 (pg. 481-9) Basically, I have PTSD and somewhere squirreled away in my subconscious is the memory of the shock I received so many years ago and that I didn’t even earn but scared the life out of me just the same. Now, sometimes when I’m “fine” but not so secretly carrying around stress, that memory finds its way into my unconscious mind and rears its head forcefully, and convincingly. 

I mentioned this incident to my therapist I said “They say these phantom shocks are brought on by stress and anxiety. I thought I was doing okay, but maybe I’m not.” Her response? “Maybe parts of you are okay, and parts of you aren’t.” Shh. I’m fine, remember? She followed up, “My take is that you are feeling understandably vulnerable”. Ugh. I reminded her that to me that is the worst of all the feelings and quickly changed the subject. It is much easier to duck and weave from your therapist when you aren’t actually in their office where they can play defense or maybe it is offense…more directly. Also, she was right and I was in the mood to hate that. I feel like I spend a lot of time dealing with my feelings, I’m just not the greatest at truly feeling them. I have good intentions, and I mean to but when it comes down to it most often feelings have to catch me off guard and attack. 

Case and point an understandable but odd bit of sadness that struck me last night as I was falling asleep (I told you it is always sleeping or bedtime). I have a heart cath coming early next week and I was thinking of the things that I need to get in order beforehand. Suddenly I was completely overwhelmed with sadness. If things move the way my cardiologist predicted this is very likely the last heart cath this heart will have done. I am not particularly keen on heart caths or anything, they certainly don’t hold a lot of happy memories. Though there is that one time that Charlotte got to be my nurse and my femoral artery wouldn’t clot so we got to spend quality time with her applying direct pressure to my groin, that was kind of funny. That same visit Julie was the last nurse standing and we got to hang out until way past her shift ended because they wanted me to have a bed for overnight but one never came so Charlotte vouched for me that this wasn’t my first rodeo and I would return if I started to bleed out, (I did not in fact bleed out). So while I don’t have any particularly fond memories of heart caths it was just the thought of this being the first “last” for this heart. It struck me harder than I would have imagined. Lasts are hard, even if they are for the best.

It doesn’t help that you are talking to the person who personified everything in her youth (and maybe still has that habit). No stuffy slept on the floor for fear that I would hurt their feelings, when my mom got me a “pet net” for the corner above my bed deciding who went up there and who stayed on the bed might as well have been deciding who lived and who died. I guess in a not so subtle way I still feel like that now, this heart has been loyal, it has been through hell and back and done everything that was asked of it and more, replacing it feels like a bit of a betrayal and facing this first, “last” just really drove that thought home. So, the jack-in-the-box popped open and the feelings jumped out. It wasn’t so much the feelings, but the when and why that surprised me. I knew more feelings would come, I think it will continue to be a mystery what causes them and why I react to them. I will meet them as they come, and I will deal with them as they do. I have a target to work with, I have to start looking at the hard thing a bit more, so I can come to terms with what it means to say goodbye to the heart that has carried me when so many said it couldn’t. I have been given the gift of time to grieve and thank my spiteful, spitfire of a friend while it still beats in my chest. Perhaps, like most grief it won’t be something I completely get over, but something that dulls as time passes and acceptance sets in. 

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