My
soul bear thou thy part, triumph in God above
And
with a well tuned heart sing thou the songs of love!
Let
all thy days, till life shall end, what e’re he send,
be
filled with praise.
(Richard
Baxter Hymn 625 v. 4)
Dear Friends
Some of you know that I took an unexpected trip to the
ER a week before Thanksgiving. The trip was because I experienced what I thought was a “little cardiac episode”. Thank
God I called 911, because they ended up finding the main artery to my heart (LAD)
was almost completely (95%) clogged.
Thanks to the 911 operator who told me to find and
start chewing an aspirin. Thanks to the Corona firemen who offered initial care,
followed by the paramedics who gave me three flavored chewable aspirin
and nitroglycerin and then drove me to the hospital. And thanks to all the good
folk at Corona Regional Medical Center for the next 48 hours, including the
steady hands who put in a stent.
My reason for sharing is to remind us all,
in any circumstance, not to hesitate to ask for help, including and
especially when it is something like this. When in doubt, call 911!
While I am writing a fuller reflection about this attention getting experience with some fun details and humor, this is enough for now. In the
meantime, in light of the words quoted above, I feel my heart has had a major tune up and
now, under the care of a good cardiologist I met yesterday, I am confident I am well on my way
to a complete recovery.
This all happened on November 16th. That
morning, just a few hours before I called 911, I had read from a book of 365 daily
meditations the one for November 16th called “Do It Now”. Here is
how the meditation ends:
“The greatest shock in my life,” said
Billy Graham on a recent birthday, “has been the brevity of life. Whatever you
want to do, do it now. There are only so many tomorrows”.
I am thankful beyond measure for the nearly four weeks
of tomorrows since November 16th. Thanks for your prayers and good
wishes. Blessings for all of you or your family or friends who
have or are going through this experience.
John
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