|
What I Learned from My Heart Attack
Next: About this document
What I Learned from My Heart Attack
Stephen A. Karol
From CCAR Journal: A Reform Jewish Quarterly, Winter 1997
Reprinted with Permission
``This 44 year old... patient of mine since 1983 is known to have
hyper-cholesterolemia treated with Pravachol 20 mg. per day. He has a
positive family history for hypertension. He has a stressful
occupation but otherwise has no risk factors for heart disease. The
patient has had some vague chest discomfort. This occasionally
happens in the winter. It has gone on since 1993. It is not related
to exertion, excitement or emotion...''
That's me the physician wrote about on January 22, 1995. It was the
day I had my heart attack. I'm now forty-five years old. I have a
great wife and a super daughter. We live in a wonderful new house
with friendly neighbors in a town outside Boston the beauty of which
captivates us. I was one month into a two-month sabbatical, to be
followed by a congregational trip to Israel that I had planned for
more than a year ... I gave up smoking a pipe eight years ago. The
only liquor I ever have is a sip of Shabbat wine. I was riding my
bike. I was taking swimming lessons. A week before, my wife and
daughter and I had been to Cleveland for my nephew's Bar Mitzvah
service in which I had the privilege of reading Torah and blessing
him. The next day, I was scheduled to go to Brandeis University to
sit in on a class that I would eventually be teaching as a ``visiting
scholar'' in the Hornstein Program for Jewish Communal Service. And
waiting for me when I was to return from my time off was a long-term
contract with my congregation in the expanded building we dedicated
back in October.
``At 9:10 p.m. the patient had substernal chest pain. At 9:30 p.m. I
received a call from his wife stating that the EMTs were at his house
and that he was on the floor of the bathroom. He had not passed out,
but he was having severe pain and looked awful ... When I arrived
(at the hospital), the patient had six of ten chest pain. He was
hypertensive with a heart rate in the fifties ... His
electrocardiogram shows acute ST segment elevation inferiorly and
anteriorly, consistent with an infero-anterior myocardial infarction.''
I'll never forget that night, the pain increasing as I sat at the
computer while I was printing up a chapter from a book I had started
to write. It was the proverbial ``elephant sitting on your chest''
feeling, and I thought a little Advil and lying down would take care
of it. Fortunately for me, I have a low threshold of pain. Once the
EMTs got me up off the floor and started to wheel me out of the house,
I said ``I'm sorry'' to my wife. My daughter, who had been awakened by
all the noise, was standing in the living room with our neighbor who
came over to help out. She was crying, as you could imagine, and she
handed me one of her stuffed animals. ``Take this with you, Daddy, and
it will make you feel better,'' she said. ``I'll be back,'' I replied.
From Sunday through Thursday I was in the hospital, dealing with the
fact that I, who was too young and too busy to have a heart attack,
had had a heart attack. I wondered if it was caused by the funeral I
did that Sunday --- the one for former members of the congregation whose
son had committed suicide. Do the funeral in the afternoon, have the
heart attack at night. It made sense. I was to discover later that
it took more than that for my heart to fail. On Thursday afternoon, I
tried walking with my wife outside my room, with a monitor attached to
me. The nurse saw something she didn't like, and they made an
immediate decision to ship me into Boston for a cardiac
catheterization.
From the friendly local hospital I was transported to the big city
hospital. The waiting for the cath procedure the next day was
maddening. Afterward, the cardiologist told me I'd had an LAD
dissection. The left anterior descending artery of my heart had been
dissected by a piece of plaque that had come loose. It was, he said,
a one in 10,000 chance ... My luck, I thought. With those odds, I
should play the lottery ... Finally, they let me go home on Tuesday
night.
My movements were pretty much restricted --- no walking, lifting,
climbing, driving. There was a great burden placed on both my wife
and daughter to take care of me. I was allowed one trip down the
stairs in the morning and one up the stairs at night. Our living room
became ``the solarium,'' and I was glad that it was nice and sunny. By
Saturday I felt pretty good, but ... by dinner time had worked
myself into a real snit featuring chest pains. Our neighbor was good
enough to drive my wife and me to the hospital, where they diagnosed
me as having a panic attack, settled me down and released me the next
day. At that point, my wife decided to call her mother and ask her to
come and help out.
She arrived on Monday night late ... My wife went to work the next
morning, and when she returned, I convinced her to take me to the
emergency room. My heart didn't bother me but my stomach hurt like
never before, my left arm was weak and I was worried that I was going
to have another heart attack. What I had instead that day in the
hospital was a revelation. In the bed next to me was a
seventy-five-year -old man who had been found lying on his apartment
floor twenty hours after he had collapsed. Across from me was a young
victim of spouse abuse who had taken an overdose of pills. Next to
her was a man my age who had suffered a heart attack and was ranting
and raving about how no one was taking care of him well enough and
fast enough. I decided then and there that I was in pain, but that it
could have been worse, and that I intended to get better.
After that, my doctor put me in a two-week ``quarantine'' --- no phone
calls, except from doctors and family; no car rides, except for
appointments and a couple of meals out. He presented to me a new
concept, especially for a rabbi: ``Think of yourself first.'' By
February 16, I was in the cardiac rehab and stress management program
at the hospital. On February 20, I was driven to Brandeis by a
congregant and toddled my way to the classroom to teach my first
session in the Hornstein Program. The next day, the day of departure
for the Israel trip, my wife and daughter and I went out to dinner to
take our minds off the fact that we weren't going. On February 23, I
took and passed a thallium stress test and on the 27th, taught again
at Brandeis. On March 5, Samantha, Mary, and I welcomed everyone from
the Israel trip back to the temple and were glad we did. The
following morning, as required by my cardiologist, I began seeing a
psychologist once a week. And as I had planned originally, I made my
first public appearance in three months at the temple at our Purim
carnival. I started work the next day, with a different schedule, a
different outlook, and a different definition of what and who comes
first and what is normal. How different was it? I taught the third
of my four sessions at Brandeis in the morning, came home for lunch,
took a nap, and worked at the temple for three hours in the afternoon.
``You're too young to have a heart attack!'' I've heard that statement
over and over and over again since that night ... But I have
learned that there is more to heart disease than meets the eye. I may
not have looked like a heart attack candidate, but I fit the profile.
There was more to me and what was going on inside me than anyone knew
... This heart attack was the result of the way in which I deal
with stress and disappointment and anger. It now has to be the way I
used to deal with stress and disappointment and anger.
There are probably very few people who have seen me explode in anger
at someone, verbally abuse another person, or confront someone
publicly and have it out with them. To lose control of my emotions
was a defeat. To express my emotions was a weakness. To keep my cool
was a victory, even it if meant that inside me it hurt. All along, I
ignored an important statement from Leviticus: ``Reprove your neighbor,
but incur no guilt because of him.'' Whenever I have interpreted that
for others, I have said that it means that you should sit down and
talk with someone when you have a problem. The guilt you incur is
when you don't make the effort to talk or when you yell first instead
of trying to talk reasonably.
I learned during my recovery period that I have not fully practiced
what I preached. When I told the officers at the end of my sixth year
here that I could no longer handles the overwhelming responsibilities
of being rabbi, Bar/Bat Mitzvah tutor, and school principal, one of
them asked me: ``Why didn't you tell us before how much this was
hurting you?''
Why didn't I tell ... I know it will get done right if I do it.
It's called ``Type A behavior'' --- striving for perfection, expecting
everyone else to do the same, being upset when they don't, and either
letting them know it angrily or keeping it cooped up inside. I call
it ``imploding'' instead of exploding...
My negative feelings revolved around not living up to commitments. I
made commitments to people, I helped them, I taught them, I performed
life-cycle events for them, I cared about them- and they did not
respond as I had hoped. Bar and Bat Mitzvah students who did not go
on to Pre-Confirmation and Confirmation, violating the very meaning of
their ceremony; couples for whom I did baby namings who told me they
would join the temple and did not; men and women who studied and
became Jews-by-choice under my sponsorship, who were officially
welcomed into our community on the bimah, and have yet to be involved
at all; members of the congregation who resigned without warning, or
who resigned and then exploded about this or that which could have
been resolved if we had sat down and discussed it. I took, and I
think, still take each one personally, although much less so now than
before. I am a rabbi committed to the survival and continuity of the
Jewish people, and I don't believe that money issues or personal
slights or empty-nest syndrome should stand in the way of that. It is
the act of breaking off the commitment to which I have reacted. But I
made the problem worse by the way I reacted. And because of my heart
attack, I was faced with the challenge of abandoning my passionate
feelings about Judaism, or retaining them and toning down my
reactions, or retaining them and telling people exactly how I feel
about their actions.
I don't believe that God caused my heart attack in order to warn me
that I had better ``shape up or ship out.'' But I do believe that God
has given me the faith and the ability and the strength to draw my own
conclusions, to make conscious decisions, and to take care of myself
and make me better able to take care of others. So, I went through
the process of changing and relearning. For the next few months, I
was in a cardiac rehab exercise program ... in a seminar on stress
management ... joined a health club. My members no longer found me
sitting at my desk and working at my computer and talking on the phone
and munching on a sandwich, all at the same time. I was somewhere
else in the building or out of the building, just eating. I became
much more careful about what I ate and learned to think before I got
angry and to express my dissatisfaction or doubts rather than bottling
them up.
A colleague who had experience a heart attack a few years ago
recommended that I read the book Reversing Heart Disease by
Dr. Dean Ornish. Aside from his wonderful medical and nutritional
advice, there is a great quote which really resonates with me, and is
a good midrash besides: ``In the Old Testament, Moses loses his temper
and strikes a rock; as a result, God tells Moses that he can't enter
Israel. I see the story as a metaphor, that is, when we are consumed
by anger (hit the rock), it keeps us from entering our natural state
of inner peace (Israel). It's not simply that God punishes us; we
limit ourselves. And we can make different choices.'' I learned
during my sabbatical that I can make different choices, and that if I
do, I and others will benefit from it in the long run. Occasionally,
I slip up. But I have learned how to compensate for it. The ``old
me'' would have gotten angry at myself. The ``new me'' has a better
sense of humor, a better sense of perspective. I realize I am not
always going to be as good as I should be.
The lessons I have learned from my heart attack in the last year and a
half have already helped me in my recovery ... They are lessons I
have ended up teaching my congregants, and when they are followed,
life proceeds along very nicely:
- We shouldn't try to do everything ourselves ... Have enough faith
in others to delegate.
- All of us would do well to schedule a time each day for exercise and
relaxation in order to reduce stress and enjoy life.
- It is a good idea to take a true day off each week, even if it means
doing activities instead of pure rest.
- We can set reasonable timetables and deadlines for ourselves and
others. It helps to tell others that we need their work done before
the eleventh hour.
- We can set standards for ourselves, but shouldn't beat ourselves up
for not meeting them every single time.
- It is worth the effort to find the good in a bad situation. A big
mistake is not necessarily the end of the world.
- If there occurs what we perceive to be a problem, we must deal with
it immediately before it grows and festers.
- If we let a problem grow and fester, we are better off when we talk
to someone who will let us vent about it, and then try to solve the
problem once we have calmed down.
- If we fight for an issue and lose, if someone does or says something
that we don't like, it is wrong to demonize the people.
- Just as we might think carefully about putting certain foods into our
body, we also need to think before getting angry. ``Is this worth
getting angry about?''
- If some situation or person causes us to get disappointed or angry,
it is advisable to find out why it happened and what can be done to
prevent it from happening again.
- If someone breaks a commitment, we can call them on it without
exploding at them.
- If we are angry or disappointed about someone or something, we must
try to get past it, because we need the energy to live the rest of our
lives.
- We should not spend a disproportionate amount of time trying to
please those who criticize us constantly or who will never be happy
with what we or anyone else may do. Better to save our time and energy
for those whom we can truly help.
- I have found it helpful to pray and meditate, on my own, in the
quiet of a dark room ... when I am in need of strength, when I feel
the stress coming on, when I need to remind myself that I am not in
this life alone.
- We need to be aware of the signals our bodies send us, to take the
time to take care of them because they will let us know when we don't.
The time we devote to that will benefit not just us but also the
people we love and the people with whom we work.
Hillel said: ``The reticent do not learn and the hot-tempered do not
teach.'' ... He knew that life lived at the extremes of our emotions
renders us less effective and less healthy than we could be ... One
of the greatest lessons I have learned from my heart attack is that I
can be in control. With the help of God, with the love of my family,
with the support of my friends and colleagues, with the understanding
of my congregants, with the skill of my physicians and therapists, I
have come a long way. But how I live is up to me, and I never knew
it.
Stephen A. Karol is rabbi of Congregation Sha'aray Shalom, Hingham,
MA.
Next: About this document
Excelsior Computer Services
Sun Nov 23 14:25:00 EST 1997
|