Ovie
Well-known member
I wanted to bring up a subject I have yet to see.
As I was sitting in our breakfast room the other day alone eating my cereal, I had about a quick moment of "omg I had open heart surgery". Now I find (not all cases) that with as routine as OHS, and the medical advances that we have today, leave us feeling, I should say numb to recognizing the severity of what we have gone through. Before we are anxious, scared, stressed, but I think ready when it comes down to the big show.
Growing up, I remember being young..middle school, high school and you hear about heart surgery, or brain surgery, and you just look at it as this horrifying thing, that could never happen to you. I know alot of you knew about issues most of your life, but myself..and I'm sure I don't stand alone find out out of nowhere that we have problems.
Now I'm probably just ranting, and possibly making no sense. But the point I'm trying to get at is, do you think as a society we have become numb to the actual dangers of what we went into because of how routine it is? I'm sure the argument of, well it's so normal to do these days you have nothing to worry about. I know we acknowledge it, we don't try and dwell on it, we do what we have to to stay healthy. Maybe I stand alone on the topic, but just that moment of almost shock the other day of...WOW, in this one my life that I've been given, I had my heart cut into, my lifeline, the thing that keeps me alive...yet I walked into that hospital calm and collective.
I hope you all know what I'm trying to say, and if not I'm sorry for rambling, it was more of just a food for thought on how we've become desensitized to such large issues.
Also I'm speaking for myself, I didn't mean to use the words US and WE so much. By no means am I speaking on anybody's behalf but my own. Just crazy to really go deep into thought about. I feel more shocked after than before TBH.
As I was sitting in our breakfast room the other day alone eating my cereal, I had about a quick moment of "omg I had open heart surgery". Now I find (not all cases) that with as routine as OHS, and the medical advances that we have today, leave us feeling, I should say numb to recognizing the severity of what we have gone through. Before we are anxious, scared, stressed, but I think ready when it comes down to the big show.
Growing up, I remember being young..middle school, high school and you hear about heart surgery, or brain surgery, and you just look at it as this horrifying thing, that could never happen to you. I know alot of you knew about issues most of your life, but myself..and I'm sure I don't stand alone find out out of nowhere that we have problems.
Now I'm probably just ranting, and possibly making no sense. But the point I'm trying to get at is, do you think as a society we have become numb to the actual dangers of what we went into because of how routine it is? I'm sure the argument of, well it's so normal to do these days you have nothing to worry about. I know we acknowledge it, we don't try and dwell on it, we do what we have to to stay healthy. Maybe I stand alone on the topic, but just that moment of almost shock the other day of...WOW, in this one my life that I've been given, I had my heart cut into, my lifeline, the thing that keeps me alive...yet I walked into that hospital calm and collective.
I hope you all know what I'm trying to say, and if not I'm sorry for rambling, it was more of just a food for thought on how we've become desensitized to such large issues.
Also I'm speaking for myself, I didn't mean to use the words US and WE so much. By no means am I speaking on anybody's behalf but my own. Just crazy to really go deep into thought about. I feel more shocked after than before TBH.