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I Have Been In Hospital

I left the house with nothing except my insurance cards and ID. I pulled on a loose shirt as I walked out the door completely ignoring the need for a bra. We drove to the nearest ER perhaps a little faster than we should have. My heart was pounding, my chest hurt, and each shallow breath left me struggling for the next.

My distress was obvious. Within only a few minutes I had two doctors in attendance ordering oxygen, an IV to drip heart-slowing drugs into my arm, an X-ray of my chest, and a battery of blood tests. It was all happening so fast. About an hour later the drugs hadn't slowed my heart and there were no easy answers from blood tests or X-rays. The only relief was found in the oxygen. My breathing was a bit easier.

Have you ever been loaded into an ambulance? It seems my husband had signed all the waivers and I was on my way.

Upon arrival at the hospital I was taken to Rm 20 in ICU. That glassed in room was to be my home for the next seven days which passed in a blur of more drugs, tests and procedures and a monitor that waited patiently for me to fall asleep before screaming an alarm - usually false. The days were punctuated only by daily visits from the vampire which I remember all to well and visits from my husband and a few friends which I only half remember.

Day 8: I was in a regular ward. One last procedure and I could go home. My heart was in regular rhythm, there were no blockages. I had learned that I had a leaky valve and my heart was not pumping enough to clear out the fluids from my body. We would access all that in a couple of weeks.

Except I had to stay until they were sure there would be no side effects from the last procedure. Except they needed one last set of labs. Except I couldn't leave without a life vest. A life vest? Yes. The representative from the company would be there to fit me in just a little while.

Finally she arrived and with brief introductions out of the way she embarked on a lengthy explanation of the external defibrillator, how it works, how to care for it, even how to return it.

Finally she was done, I was fitted out with my new Life Vest, prescriptions in hand, and at last I was home. And home had never looked so good.

A day later the irony hit me. I had left home with no bra and returned with an electric brassiere that I would wear for the next two weeks, 24/7. The freedom of going braless had been traded for a medieval garment electrified for the life saving task of shocking my heart back into rhythm should it decide to revert to its syncopated jazzy beat.

I am anxious to see what the next step will be. Hopefully soon.
kaf9292 · 80-89, M
The freedom of being bra-less is something that should not be denied.
dulcedona · 70-79, F
Thank you! @kaf9292
dcsm42 · 70-79, M
I'm sorry for your illness... I sure hope you get every fixed in that big beautiful heart and you can get back to enjoying the sexy freedoms soon😍 Dc
Illeana · 26-30, F
What actually is your disease?and I'm sorry for your condition
dulcedona · 70-79, F
@Illeana we still don't know what came first, the leaky valve or the weakened heart. Hopefully, after two weeks of regular heart beat and additional tests, some answers should be more obvious. Thanks for your concern.
swl2jo · 56-60, M
wonder what condition could be treated with electric panties?
dulcedona · 70-79, F
I'd be afraid to ask. Thanks for the comment. @swl2jo
minarth008 · 61-69, M
That is a funny statement about the bra.lol
AllAboutLaffs · 70-79, M
And you still have your sense of humor .... 👍
Confined · 56-60, M
May the force be with you.

 
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