My therapist has a fairy frightening medical condition. in The Big, Blue, House. Year two.

  • Feb. 22, 2023, 4:40 p.m.
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  • Public

My therapist has a scary, potentially fatal heart condition. I don’t know her age, but she’s referenced her father when I talk about the past, as in “My dad told me about…”, so I gather I’m old enough to be her mother, and I’m fifty. So I’m guessing she’s thirty-two or younger.

First it was a missed appointment with a mysterious medical emergency. Then the explanation that she feinted, and her heart wasn’t getting enough oxygen to her brain. That was the first week of January. Since then she’s missed two more appointments because she had to be rushed to the hospital, and she’s seen at least two specialists, and is now wearing a heart monitor for the next two weeks, to see the pattern of her heart and theoretically make a diagnosis.

Of course I ask her every time I see her how she’s doing. In the last week, she’s been to the emergency room, and learned that getting intravenous fluids stabilizes her. So now she’s drinking pedialite. She says that they don’t know why the fluids help her.

I asked her if she has to keep working to keep her health insurance, she says no. She says she does it because she loves her job, and likes helping people.

What I did not say, (go me, not saying something that I was thinking is like holding back a landslide), is that most of what she’s doing, with me anyway, is giving me someone to worry about and the anxiety of not knowing from one week to the next whether she’ll even be alive.

If I stopped seeing her, then I’d worry even more, so this is preferable to that. But still. In her particular circumstances, I think it would’ve been better for both her, and her clients, to have taken a sort of sabbatical after the initial “medical emergency”, until her health is sorted out. It’s terrifying me, and putting undo stress on her.

Or maybe working really DOES help her emotionally, and I’m just being selfish.

But it’s harder talking to someone when you know that too much stress could literally kill her. I can’t get too dark, she’ll start staring at her desk with her hand on her head. So I spend approximately half of the hour, (well, forty minutes today, because she was ten minutes late, and she wanted to quit at ten til’), asking her about herself. How is she doing, did the train explosion affect her or her family, when is her next doctor’s appointment, ect. I spend a lot of the remaining time talking about things I’d tell anyone, like the nigh endless weird qualities of this house, and I might spend five minutes telling her anything about my actual emotional issues.

If I have a breakdown over anything, I won’t want to tell her about it, for fear it might trigger her heart to skip enough beats to send her to the emergency room again. I intentionally try to keep the conversation as light as possible.

I’m not mad at her. I’m very, very concerned. I just think she should be resting. I don’t think she’s really in any condition to do her job.

I asked her if there was any chance she might get a pacemaker or something like that. She says she hopes it’s something neurological, because it would be easier to fix than surgery. I can understand that. Cardiac surgery is scary.

Like I told her: I have a nasty habit of outliving people. Please don’t die.


Forest Firefly February 22, 2023

Wow, I can see why you're worried for her. Maybe she is the type of therapist who is energized positively when she is able to help people? I would imagine that would be the only reason she'd still be working until she gets her health sorted out. But geez, that does kind of put a hefty emotional burden on you as her patient. I hope things improve for her soon, so she can go back to doing the job she loves.

Sleepy-Eyed John February 25, 2023

Maybe a new therapist. There's millions of them.

Asenath Waite Sleepy-Eyed John ⋅ February 25, 2023

I considered that, but then I'd never know what happened to her. I'm invested now.

Sleepy-Eyed John Asenath Waite ⋅ February 27, 2023

Eh. I'd just move on, but I hear ya. You're paying for a service, not to be her friend.

Asenath Waite Sleepy-Eyed John ⋅ February 28, 2023

Ah, but see, I don't have any real life friends, so I kind of am paying to be her friend. It's a desperate agoraphobe thing. If I were an agoraphobe. Which I kind of am, since I never leave the house.

Sleepy-Eyed John Asenath Waite ⋅ February 28, 2023

Ya. i don't leave the house much either. What's your area like? I live in a not so great area, but I'm okay with it generally. So is my Mom. This one girl I hooked up with a decade ago refused to come here (but she still did :p)

Asenath Waite Sleepy-Eyed John ⋅ March 01, 2023

Warren Ohio, in general, is a safe town. But there are several shootings a year, so it's not as safe as smaller towns, or towns in more expensive states. Like is probably true in most places, the less expensive the real estate is, the more crime is in the area. I've spend a lot of time looking over crime maps of Warren, going back several years. There is a LOT of theft and vandalism. Not so much armed robbery or burglary or murder though, which makes it far better than Toledo, where we were.

I'm not afraid of being mugged or anything like that. What keeps me indoors 90% of the time is just the difference in how people talk / communicate versus where I grew up.

I spent my whole life perfecting pretending to be a bible belt redneck or stoner. The subtle way they walk, the head nod as you pass someone, the half smile, the way to sit, the common small talk, etc.

Here none of it serves me at all. The people are completely different, and I HATE IT. So I avoid people completely, and it sucks. Believe me, I wish I could afford to live further south.

Sleepy-Eyed John Asenath Waite ⋅ March 04, 2023

Right hmmmm. Fitting in can be hard. Or passing anyway.

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