It’s Ironic. And Surprising. And Scary.

I finished the edits to Friday’s issue on Thursday afternoon. If you read it, you will remember that the main bit was about aging – how my perspective on getting older has changed throughout my life. I said:

“In my 20s and 30s, I didn’t think of death at all. In my 40s and 50s, it felt like a lifetime away. In my 60s, it was a thought, but only an occasional one. But now I can see it just around the next bend.”

At 5:00 p.m., after emailing that essay to Judith, I had a Jiu Jitsu class with Vitor. I was feeling tired, but we wrestled vigorously. And so, by the end of the class an hour later, I was feeling good. Vitor and I sat on the mats talking about this and that, as we often do after a lesson. At one point in our conversation, I noticed that I was having trouble articulating my thoughts. It was difficult to produce a coherent sentence. This went on for maybe a minute. I felt slightly embarrassed. So, I decided it was time to go. I was halfway to my feet when I fell down. We were on a mat, so I wasn’t hurt. I went to stand up again. But, again, I fell down.

I rested for several minutes, attributing my little episode to temporary exhaustion. When I felt I could stand, I did so, successfully this time. As I approached the door to exit, I tried to say something self-denigrating to ease Vitor’s evident discomfort. But the words came out garbled.

Vitor asked me to wait. He went next door to my exercise facility and brought back John, my physical therapist. John gave me a few diagnostic tests. He said he thought I had experienced TIA, which I found out later was short for “transient ischemic attack.” TIA is basically a mini-stroke that doesn’t do any permanent damage. Still, John recommended that I go to the hospital to check it out.

By then, I could speak without a problem and I felt fine. But I agreed to let Vitor drive me home. While Vitor drove me home, John called K and filled her in on what had happened. Seconds after I got out of Vitor’s car, I was in K’s car heading to Boca Raton Regional Hospital.

K dropped me off, and I walked into the emergency room. “It’s probably nothing,” I told the receptionist. “But my friend thinks I just had a TIA.”

She got on the phone, and seconds later a young man was interviewing me. I was amused and flattered. I can’t count the number of times I’ve been in an emergency room with a broken this or snapped that, in great pain, waiting hours to have someone take a look at me.

Minutes after my interview with the young man, I was speaking to a doctor. And then another one. By the time K returned from parking the car, less than 15 minutes later, they were admitting me to the neurology wing of the hospital (which, I learned later, has a very good reputation).

I got a CAT scan that night and an ultrasound on my neck the next morning. They told me I needed more tests, so I spent all of Friday getting one test after another. It wasn’t until Saturday afternoon, after the MRI of my brain had been analyzed, that K and I learned it wasn’t a TIA. It was a stroke. Actually, two strokes.

I was aware of the irony of my Friday essay. But I was also surprised. No, shocked. For someone my age – even for someone half my age – I’m in very good shape. I’m strong. I’m flexible. I have good lung power. Stamina. I mean, I compete in grappling with guys half my age. My personal MD had reminded me that my general cholesterol rates were somewhat high. And he’d suggested that I take statin drugs. But I declined. I didn’t need anything, I told myself, except to keep training like a 30-year-old.

Alas, my thinking was flawed. Being in outside shape – and even in inside shape with respect to the usual metrics (blood pressure, blood sugar, heart capacity, lung capacity, etc.) – does not mean your organs and circulation system are in equally good shape.

In my case, the problem was in the left carotid artery. It was 80% to 90% occluded. “But look at me,” I said to the chief neurologist. “I’m fine.” “Yes, you look fine,” she said. “But the ultrasound images look scary.”

“Scary?” Did she have to say “scary”? Couldn’t she have said “not so fine”?

So, I did what any intelligent person would do. I conducted my own scientific research on the World Wide Web. And I managed to come up with enough data and authoritative statements to be convinced that if I lived past the weekend, I’d be lucky to live another three or four years.

This put a damper on the rest of that day and the next. The shadow of death I had alluded to in my Friday essay was now directly in front of me. As the bard said, my “native hue of resolution” was “sicklied over with the pale cast of thought.”

I got no work done on Friday, but managed to get bits and pieces of mindless emails answered on Saturday. And by Saturday afternoon, I was ready to start something more challenging. I started with writing this.

Tomorrow morning (Monday), if all goes well, I will meet with the surgical team that will tell me whether they are going to shove a stent through my groin and up through my heart and into the carotid artery. Or whether they will slice open my neck, open the artery, clean out the plaque, and sew me up. (I’ve done some research on that. Given that the extension of the carotid artery, which is in the head and attached to the brain, is apparently also heavily occluded, I think they’re going to do the cutting surgery, which is fine with me.)

You will be getting this issue, as usual, on Tuesday. If I’ve had the procedure and it was successful, I’m sure I’ll be back to my usual level of resolution. I’ll be pontificating about how to live a better, richer, more productive life, and I’ll be asking you to take my advice.

But what I hope I’m going to be doing is something very different. I am hoping that I will look at this event as just about every person I’ve spoken to has advised me to do. As a lucky break. A second chance.

And they are right.

Of course, they are right! We all know that there are things in life more important than wealth and accomplishment. There’s love. Kindness. Caring. Relationships.

We know all that. And we know that if were smart – like wise-smart – we’d live each day like we truly understood this most fundamental truth.

So, that’s what I’m thinking about tonight. What would I do if I really wanted to live each of my next days with the highest quality of experience I can ask of life? It’s not such a difficult question. The answers, when you are in the state I’m in, come pretty quickly and clearly.

I know what they are. The question: Do I have the resolve to stick with my plans? I felt terrible on Thursday and Friday. I’m feeling good enough to do some work (this work, for example) today. And as I feel better, I notice that the pale cast of thought is getting paler and paler. The resolution seems to be seeping back.

If I actually do what I think I want to do, what I should do in this last, exponentially shortening stage of my life, this may be the last blog post you ever receive from me.

But… check your inbox on Friday. I may have something there, an update, waiting for you.

“In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.” – Theodore Roosevelt