EasterRat, there are some folks on this forum that are from Australia and are influenced by their tendency to be frank and tactless, but they are really kind, considerate, and well informed blokes. Communication with these folks can lead to misunderstanding as do those like me who often do a bad job of putting satire and humor in our writing. So don't take it personally - just mark it up to we are from the US (or Mars) and they are from somewhere else (or Venus).EasterRat;n873258 said:Hey hey...simmer down over there folks
EasterRat;n873258 said:My question: I have not heard a whole lot about what to expect as I move from 8 weeks to 8 months to 8 years. I know at some point I will or hope to be considered 'normal' in terms of heart function and that I will be able to return to whatever activity I desire and I know that I am obviously not there or even close yet. I am not impatient. I am not pushing it. I am simply curious: when did you get to the point where you resumed being you and stopped framing everything with the cautionary heart tale? Clear enough?
Your question is a good one, but there is no one answer. As you can expect we are all different. My doc said after I recovery from the surgery, I would be as fit as before I had Aortic Stenosis. He set my expectation that recovery would take 6 - 12 months, but after 3 months, I was unlimited. Well, unlimited in the sense that he lectured me that I was not a kid anymore and that I should not push myself, or heart, to where I can not say a sentence without taking a breath. For me, after 3 months after OHS, that takes 60 minutes of walking on a treadmill at 3 mph. I'm trying to train to do a thru hike with my son for 50 - 100 miles in the Rockies. The issues is, for me, being 73 years old, there is rarely a time when something doesn't hurt, so it is difficult to tell if the hurt is heart related or just being 73. My advice to you is listen to your body and you will be surprised as how fast you do recover.