Nibbling at edges
by Elouise
Nibbling at edges
A dropped heartbeat
Here . . . . . now there
Random holes of silence
Never to be filled
Gone forever
Eluding my grasp
Silently stealing life
That once seemed
Steady and sure
Several days ago I decided to wear my heart monitor. I was curious. How often and how long are these episodes of atrial fibrillation? Lucy Pacemaker takes care of the slow beats. I don’t even know when she’s doing it because I’m usually asleep.
So what’s up with those fast-beating AFib episodes? Sometimes I can tell when my heart misses beats, but not usually. Often I feel weak, especially in my legs and when I reach to get something from a high shelf. My energy level plummets, and I feel off-balance.
For three days I wore my heart monitor from the time I got up until I went to bed. Nothing. Just wonderfully steady, strong beats. I’m not sure what I was expecting, but I was thrilled and full of energy.
Yesterday morning things went haywire. I saw it on my heart monitor, and felt it in my body. Weak and discouraged doesn’t begin to describe the feeling.
After some tears of frustration, I decided my heart could use some comfort. I also pared down my schedule to three things: make (and enjoy!) a simple lentil soup, play the piano, and exercise indoors.
After half an hour on my semi-recumbent bike, plus walking around the house while listening to the radio, it happened. My heart suddenly settled down, more than 8 hours after the fibrillation began.
Yesterday evening I jotted down the poem at the top. An acknowledgment that I’m dying in more ways than one—and that there’s life in me, though it’s not what I expected.
As for you, dear Reader, here’s a Reader-friendly article about AFib, and how to tell, without a monitor, whether your heartbeats are steady: Stanford University Scope Blog.
© Elouise Renich Fraser, 6 March 2019
Image found at Stanford University’s Scope Blog
Sorry to hear about your heart problems. Have you discussed with your cardiologist about installing a defibrillator? That’s what my cardiologist did. I will say that when it fires, it is no picnic – I know from experience.
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Hi, Waldo! Short answer: No, I haven’t, and I’m not opposed to having a discussion. I remember when your defibrillator was installed, and your ups and downs with it. Do you still have as much ‘shock’ to your system when it fires off? If this becomes an option for me, I hope it will be updated and fine-tuned so I don’t go through what you went through! 🙂 In the last 6-7 days I’ve had only one day when the fibrillation went on and on. Not super-high, but definitely noticeable. The other days my heart was happy and regular during waking hours. Obviously I don’t know what’s happening when I’m asleep. In the meantime, I take my meds and get as much good sleep and exercise as possible.
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