Reader's Digest

(avery) #1

114 | July• 2018


I SURVIVED A STROKE


oneknewyet.Itwouldbeanother
36 hours before I was told what I
never ever thought possible: that
Imightbeparalysedononesideof
mybody.SoonIwastolearnthatnot
onlycouldInotmovebutwhenI
went to form words my tongue was
heavyandmyvocalcordstwisted.
My words were strangled.
AsIlaytheretheconfusionwas
overpowering. Everything seemed so

vague. So alien. Nothing made sense
no matter how hard I tried to slot a
sightorsoundintoacompartmentof
my brain.
In the afternoon of the second day
a woman came into my room and
saidIhadbeenassignedtoabedon
the fourth floor. Pat packed my be-
longingsandtheporterrolledmeup
to the acute-care ward past people
shuffling along in nightgowns and
patients in wheelchairs.
AssoonasIhadbeentransferred
fromthestretchertothebedacur-
tain was whipped around its track
and I was partitioned of from the rest

me onto a stretcher and whisked me
into a treatment room where they
inserted an IV and attached me to
monitoringmachines.Icouldhear
bleeps and beeps and people assur-
ingmeIwasingoodhands.
“Whatishappeningtome?”Iasked.
My voice sounded like an old phono-
graphrecordspinningtooslowly.he
wordsseemedheavyandthick.Isaw
Patstandinginacornerfearinher
eyes.
henextthingIknewmyclothes
werebeingremoved.Mypantscame
of.Myarmsroseabovemyheadand
my shirt slipped of.
“Aren’tyoualuckyman”anurse
told me. “You’ve got ive women un-
dressing you.”
Ilaughedandagreedbutitwas
dawningonmethatmymovements
were no longer voluntary. he lights
dimmed. Pat kissed me on the fore-
headanddeparted.Iwasalone.
Iremembernothingelseabout
that night except a vague recollec-
tion of being shunted back and forth
throughafluorescentglarenever
consciousofwhereIwasgoing.I
had been sedated which was a good
thing or I may have plummeted into
the black hole that engulfed me. I
curledupthinkingtheprenatalpo-
sition offered me the most reliable
protectionagainstfreefall.
WhenPatreturnedinthemorn-
ing she told me the doctors had con-
irmed the diagnosis – I had sufered
a stroke. How severe it had been no


IT’S UNSETTLING
TO HAVEYOUR
CHILDREN SEE YOU
SO VULNERABLE.
FOR A MOMENT I FELT
DESPERATE AND
ALMOST ASHAMED
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