Where to begin…hard to remember life before
PH day.
I was always an active person, loved
running, loved football and took the ability to surpass other people’s fitness
for granted.
I guess I had it all, great kids and wife a
baby only just on the way, great job and prospects running the operating
theatres in Preston England, and an active lifestyle.
Then after a lay off after a sporting
injury I sated to try and run again. And I couldn’t. Literally couldn’t run 50
meters without feeling like my chest was caving in.
I passed this off as being unfit and
enjoying too many pizzas and beer, but when it was commented on by a member of
my team on how unfit I was after walking up stairs and being breathless to the
point I couldn’t talk, something triggered in my head and I went to see my GP.
I thought it was Asthma or Hay fever-but was surprised to be referred to
cardiology for Echocardiograms and CTs-but still I wasn’t really
bothered-indestructible.
Then I got the call-URGENT CT and my knees
buckled a bit. Still went in with good humour-until I got the results-my
consultant sat down me down with my wife and proceeded to talk about how my
heart was enlarged due to significant pressures in my lungs and all went hazy.
I can’t remember before that conversation now-1830 on the 22/8/13 In Chorley
Hospital.
Although I am medically experienced, I had
never heard of Pulmonary Hypertension and there was little information in the
hospital I was in, so I did what any 21st century boy would do, and
I asked DR Google and that’s when it all went black.
All I could think was ‘I’m going to die and
leave my wife and kids without a dad and husband’, I had never been so scared
and unpowered in my life- I was a
manager of people-I dictated the rules-not this time
Then it suddenly became worse-
‘David-you need to have HIV tests due to
your age, you have Tattoos and this is an indicator for HIV’ I couldn’t
breathe, it is hard enough to worry about leaving family, but to leave them and
also condemn them to that crippled me. I couldn’t talk for the week that I
waited for the all clear.
This was by far the worst
experience of my life.
To
be fair the hospital care over the next 2 weeks was good-I was looked after by
a great team both in Preston where I was transferred to and then to Sheffield
(which is my specialist centre). I was told I had idiopathic PAH although I can
directly link onset to running a Half marathon then flying to Australia a
couple of days after-I was never the same after that.
I experienced many procedures which
previously as a theatre practitioner had imposed on other patients, and came
out of it a better practitioner.
Following discharge started life again,
having to get used to boxes of drugs to organize a month and become regimented
and there I dwelled occasionally going to clinics where I would be sat
in-between patients 3x my age. I was too scared to move, for months I counted
and limited every step and breath as if it was my last and let myself be
overcome by a black shadow, I arranged life insurance, redirected my pension
thinking everyday was my last, not wanting to spend money on haircuts etc. as
what was the point. Immersed myself in my PS3 and just sat for what seemed like
months. I couldn’t sleep, I’d dream that I was having cardiac episodes or dying
so vivid that I was screaming in my sleep- I really feel bad for how little I
spoke to my wife and kids although I do know that I was battling depression.
In addition to this I was having chest
pains and palpitations which screwed my nights up. I’d just sit every night
watching Predator over and over. It later turned out to be reflux which yet
another tablet would resolve-but goes to show-not every bump and ache would be
due to my heart.
From that point on I slowly picked myself
up-started to go back to work, first 2 days a week, then 3, then 4.
At each stage I was feeling exhausted and
worried that I couldn’t go back to my old job which was stressful, demanded
long hours and fast paced, but the hours worked started to get longer and I was
getting more comfortable racing from meeting to meeting, but it was still at
the back of my mind, the shadow that constantly required me to count my
steps-to be worried at every flight of stairs I encountered-just in case I
couldn’t climb them and id be reminded and I’d start from the beginning again.
My real turning point came at my 9 month
appointment at Sheffield. The 6 minute shuttle run. On diagnosis I could only
make 800m-that haunted me. This time I focused and I nailed it, I could have
done more-I almost cried as I had beaten my demon (but always in my mind a
voice said ‘why are you happy? You have only jogged 1000m you were running half
marathons)
The next steps were to start going to the
gym again before each step I was so nervous-this could set me back-I don’t want
to be reminded that I was limited, but I didn’t want not to know either. The
only way I’d be happy was to confront it head on-I was back, feeling mentally and physically strong and fighting the entire
time-IPAH pushed to the back of my head-always trying to escape but it push it
back again.-id wake up knowing I was fighting and went to sleep ready to
recharge.
I started off slow and for 10 minutes-I
limited myself-I could have done more but was too scared. Then one of the most
influential men post IPAH challenged me. MR Saba from Blackpool hospital
said-we’ll never know how bad it is unless you push it. Game on!! running
increased to 30-40 mins-granted it was half the speed that I was used to but I
could run-without breathlessness and other associated symptoms, and gradually
the speed has risen, not by a lot but it has, since then I’ve lost loads of
weight and I go to the gym 3 times a week for at least 2 hours at a time. I now
do interval training and have pushed myself as hard as I ever had done.
Meeting people on line in forums was a life
changer too.
People with my condition alive after 20+ years
and not the 2-3 that Dr Google had suggested?
Also
that I was far fitter than many people on the forums-I was working 50 hours a
week-intense work, gymming and coming home to 4 kids and not once was I out of
breath or symptomatic, I don’t need O2 or may drugs, just 25 sildenafil, and
Warfarin.
I don’t take this for granted now. I have
seen how this has affected some people physically and mentally and I’m not
going to be the nest victim. It has to beat me and I don’t get beat. That’s not
to say I’m arrogant-this condition and the days after diagnosis still haunt me
and the black cloud still lingers, I occasionally tear up and want to cry, and I
know that I’m still hard to get talking and prefer to be out of crowds, but
I’ve accepted this challenge-it’s a long one, but a long fight is better than
2-3 years.
I’ve recently put my name down for a
charity 5k run for PHA-my next challenge which scares the bejeezers out of me
but again, I have to do it, and I’ll run through the fear.
My consultants have called me remarkable
and have been discharged to yearly Sheffield appointments, so all in all not
the best thing to happen to me, but I’m still alive.
There’s no point saying avoid google,
because either you or a loved one will.
Just accept it and move with it. Don’t get
caught up in how it affects others; get caught up in how it affects you. Be
inspired by these PHighters by all means but one size doesn’t fit all, push
yourself past every boundary-no matter how small they may seem to ‘normal
people’ or how you would have been before.
Just get out and do it and fight the fear otherwise you’ll be enveloped
by the worst thing possible. FEAR.
I couldn’t have done this without my wife and 4 girls. They are my power, I have very little family around me, and although I know it’s been really hard for her to really accept and understand how black it was inside my head and how hopeless life seemed even when amazing events like my daughter Lorien was born, she reminded me that life is never hopeless if you don’t lose hope.
Update: David completed a 5k run in 36 minutes after his blog submission. Way to go, David!
What an amazing guy!!!
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