Chapter #1 Head Like a Hole – Nine Inch Nails 1990

heart surgery

 My name is Lucy
 I was in the Post Office with Becca
 I had a fit
 I have had…
 a CT scan
 a chest x-ray
 full blood works
 My memory is about 10 seconds
 I am staying in hospital overnight
 The doctors do not know what happened
 I will be alright
 Bassalot loves me (and he has eaten) and he is coming back in the morning


I read the hand written note I was holding.

I read it again.

And again.

My memory was 10 seconds, if that. I was in a hospital bed in a cubicle and Bassalot was sitting next to me. I seemed perfectly happy and calm. I felt safe, I guess because Bassalot was there. I was very accepting of the situation I found myself in.

And I had the note.

Every moment now started with that note. I remember nothing except reading it and knowing Bassalot was sitting next to me. I don’t know how many times this happened but gradually my linear time sense returned and my memory began to reassemble from the note forwards. Apparently, I kept asking B what had happened, over and over (and over) again. I’d listen to his response, over and over (and over) again, and then ask if he’d eaten (?) presumably over and over (and over) again. Eventually, he’d written the whole thing down for me, and this seemed enough for me to reboot and accept that my life now started from this point.

So to flesh out the details a little.

Monday morning started much like any other, picking through trays of shiny trinkets, to package up orders for an E-bay store. The afternoon, I’d spend working in a friend’s shop, where I’d get to do a no holes barred window display of skulls, fashion and music. Just a few of my favourite things. I could then spend the rest of the day chatting to the eclectic crowd who frequented the emporium for ‘fabulous shit’ as the flyer advertised. Top day in my mind.

At the E-bay store first I was in with Becca. We sorted out the orders and left the shop with everything packaged up to go to the Post Office. We were both heading the same way so strutted out together, bumped into a friend of Becca’s on the way, and crossed Victoria Road South.

Try as I might, this is the last memory I have before realising I am lying in hospital.

Cue note:

 My name is Lucy

Yes, my name is Lucy. I don’t remember ever not knowing this. My sense of self was never in question, just my ability to remember what had happened to me that day. I certainly didn’t remember, for example, that I hadn’t been to the toilet for about 10 hours.

 I was in the Post Office with Becca

Now I really don’t remember that to this day. I remember leaving the shop with the mail and crossing the road outside the shop on the way to the Post Office. I remember seeing Becca’s mate and walking a little way but nothing more. Apparently, we got to the Post Office and stood in the queue chatting. We made it to the counter where I embarked on telling Becca a joke. Highly unlikely as I have no memory for jokes and hence don’t play the stand up comedienne very often. At some point I slumped forward as a dead weight onto Becca’s shoulder before face planting the Post Office counter with my forehead. I rebounded a full 180 degrees to land backwards on the Post Office floor giving the back of my head a big thwacking in the process. Probably for the best I don’t remember any of this.

 I had a fit

So I did apparently have a full blown seizure right there on the Post Office floor. Loss of consciousness; foaming at the mouth; fine shaking movements; turning blue and weeing in my jeans and then going completely rigid. Becca, bless her, I hadn’t even known her that long had my head on her knees while the Post Office staff were saying did I need an ambulance. Becca screamed of course I did, I was blue and very very quickly a paramedic car arrived.

I hadn’t always lived in Portsmouth. Portsmouth and Southsea are on an island, joined to the mainland by three roads. As a teenager my friend and I had cycled from Oxford, down through Portsmouth and then on to the Isle of Wight. The weather had been dismal but as we reached the edge of the Southdowns, the clouds parted and the sun picked out the glittering metropolis of the island city at sea level below us. I was sold! I applied to Polytechnic (as it was then) and never left. Incidentally, when I got there I was told there’s a bubble over Portsmouth and once you move there you never leave. I can’t dispute this so far.

The view of Portsmouth from Portsdown Hill

I loved my first year in Portsmouth. The freedom for me was unlimited. My Mum and Dad are the most incredible parents and have given me such a grounding in life with structure and security. I don’t fear life or death but am certainly not frivolous with either. I’ll try different things generally if I trust the other people involved. I literally left my thatched cottage chocolate box village life in middle England and arrived in the conservative naval city of Portsmouth.

P.S. this isn't actually my house but the court house on the High Street where Midsummer Murders is filmed - i kid you not!
Not actually my house but the court house on the High Street where Midsummer Murders is filmed – I kid you not!

The nearest Accident & Emergency department is just off the top of the island and consequently there are always medical vehicles parked in handy locations around Portsmouth. Luckily for me, one such vehicle was particularly close to Albert Road that Monday morning. In amongst the melee of Post Office would-be customers trying to come in and buy stamps and send parcels, the paramedics worked their incredible magic. A full size ambulance arrived and I was whisked away, apparently kicking and screaming by this point up to the hospital.

Meanwhile, Becca had got in touch with Sally who had Bassalot’s number. Without a moments hesitation he saddled up his trusty Golf mark IV and ‘competitively’ cantered West to the hospital, overtaking two ambulances on the way…

He was already at the ambulance bay when I arrived in my fluoro pod. The back doors opened and Becca flew out and B could see the full extent of Lucy rage inside. Someone had had the good sense to tie my legs down but that didn’t stop the top half of my body from lashing around in a windmill like motion my tuff little drummer arms up to their own shit as usual. Poor medics, honestly, just trying to help and save lives. Don’t worry, they said to B, she’s in a state of heightened anxiety, we see it a lot. He offered to help and come in and calm me down but they assured him it was all under control. It wasn’t. They asked if maybe he did want to come in and speak to me. Apparently he leant over, touching me on the shoulder, and said very calmly

‘It’s Bassalot here, it’s all going to be alright’.

At which point I smiled and calmed the fuck down. The paramedics thought it was a lovely thing and probably a huge relief on their part.

They asked B what medication I was on.

He said I wasn’t on any medication.

Ok, well what illegal drugs might I have take.

Again, B assured the team that I hadn’t taken anything illicit that morning.

Well, and looking over at me with my tattoos and blue hair, what legal highs is she on?

Bassalot looked the paramedic in the eye and said look you can trust me. I’ve known Lucy for 23 years and she is definitely not on any legal highs or any drugs. At which point I decide to smile cheekily and make some kind of ohm sign with my hands whilst saying ‘Cosmic man!’ I really don’t remember this either. Neither do I remember constantly trying to take my top off and laughing in a raucous Sid James manner whilst B calmy and reassuringly asked me to not keep getting undressed in public. I mean seriously – what had I taken??

Bassalot told me later about another young lady he’d seen in there with red hair and tattoos. She didn’t have anyone with her. He’d given her a big smile and later on the sound of her beeps said she was no longer fighting with the rest of us. It took a lot of tequilas to get that story out of him.

 I have had
 a CT scan
 a chest X-ray
 full blood works

Well, apparently I did have all those things and they showed up nothing. I was tickety boo fine according to any tests they ran that day, although one print out I came home with did indicate a lead fault in my heartbeat. Didn’t seem to be anything to worry about.

 My memory is about 10 seconds

At this point I guess they put me in a hospital bed and the whole sorry state of my lack of memory became apparent. Various nurses asked if I’d like a sandwich to which mostly I answered politely no thank you. I was asked if I needed the toilet to which I replied no I was fine. Bassalot stepped in and said actually I probably did need the toilet as I hadn’t been for about 10 hours. When I finally was brought a comode I very professionally and impressively damn near filled it! Amazed nurses looked on. At least I’d regained control of my bladder after my moment in the Post Office earlier.

So Bassalot wrote me my note. I don’t specifically remember the first time he handed it to me but I certainly remember holding on to it all night. I’m not sure when I actually got my memory back in control. I might have read the note 50 times in a row but everything I needed to know was contained on that one piece of paper. It had a past and a present and a future and anchored me back into my life again. My universe was reassuringly small. I wasn’t thinking anything beyond my hospital bed and Bassalot being there. I wasn’t concerned with the magnitude of what may or may not have happened to me. But the present seemed ok and in my tiny world there was a semblance of understanding.

 I am staying in hospital overnight

At some point Bassalot had to leave me there. By then, I was settled and smiling which I think made it a little easier for him. Also, the nurse who had come on duty had asked all the nursey questions, have you eaten, been to the toilet etc. B had repeated patiently that I probably had no idea as my memory was about 10 seconds. At which point new nurse turned directly to me and said with a twinkle in her eye:

‘You better not be giving me any trouble tonight!’

B felt he had scored gold. Finally, someone actually understanding that my memory was flaky at best, but taking it in enough good humour that he felt we’d get along. Apparently he left around 9pm. I, accepting as ever, settled down for the night, courtesy of the NHS, with lights and beeps and talking. I was wheeled between wards about three times during the night as beds were re-assigned and my status went from high observation to she’ll be gone by the morning. Gone in a good way as in going home.

I woke up on an all women’s ward. I felt fine, knew who I was and still had my note. I was given a towel and toothbrush to take to the bathroom and freshen up but was still in my gown. I checked and I still had my pants on. I was told the consultant would be round for a chat but I’d probably be discharged after that.

 The doctors do not know what happened

Well they really didn’t. The consultant came round to all the beds. He was with a flurry of younger doctors. He asked how I felt and again, reiterated the point that with the blue hair and tattoos they presumed I was on legal highs. He very much looked me in the eye at this pointed statement and I said ‘Well, it’s a fair assumption.’ He seemed ok with this answer.

It was only a fair assumption based on my looks though. Had my black out happened 4 months earlier when I was still a store manager for a health and beauty chain, I would have been dressed for work on a Monday morning. Blonde hair in a pony tail, tattoos covered and nose stud waiting patiently at home for when I finished work. Legal highs would not have been the first assumption.

As I was later to discover, I had a narrowing artery and that day I had suffered a cardiac event that wasn’t picked up by the CT scans and blood works. I look quite young for my age so no one thought to check my heart. Had I been brought in as a 60 year old man with the same symptoms, my heart may well have been the first organ to have been tested rather than an assumption of an early morning legal high habit. This is in no way a criticism of any of the medical staff. We all make assumptions about the many people we meet throughout our lives and mercifully, whoever arrived first on the scene that day saved my life. Assumptions or not.

I was brought a bag containing my clothes. Pee smelling jeans which I kind of had to put on, and a really nice jumper fashioned into a cardigan by paramedic’s scissors slashed straight down the front. I was beginning to get a measure of what had actually happened the day before and how lucky / unlucky / lucky I had been.

 I will be alright

What an amazing thing to write for me. I WILL be alright. I blacked out for no apparent reason and the consultant said I would be booked in to have a brain MRI scan at the first fit clinic. I shouldn’t drive for 6 months but otherwise was free to go and carry on as normal. The back of my head felt a little spongy. But I would be alright.

 Bassalot loves me (and he has eaten) and he is coming back in the morning

I guess it’s a thing when you get a bit couply. Do you get your own meals, always try and eat together or be really rad and spur of the moment. Where I’d worked in retail for so long with wildly differing hours from day to day, often we didn’t eat together. And often I would get in from work and ask the question “Have you eaten?” I didn’t realise it had become quite such a default though. I wonder if he’d have said no, he hadn’t eaten, what I’d have done about it yesterday.

And, of course, Bassalot does love me and he came back to get me in the morning.

Look out for chapter #2 Over the Hills and Far Away at ten past six next Monday 2nd September!

Chapter #2 Over the hills and far away – the mission – 2009

heart surgery

I’d been getting stomach cramps quite badly before Post Office Monday.

For Christmas, the previous year, some friends of mine had given me a mountain bike as a present. It was Pat’s and had been in her attic, not doing very much. Her boyfriend, a keen mountain biker, had given it a more than professional service and they’d handed it on to me. I always cycled to work and my old bike had seen better days so it was a most excellent present.

After the obligatory Christmas day test ride, speeding round the circuit with the other eleven year olds, my new steed had been parked until my first day back at work after the festive period. As I worked in retail this was 6am on Boxing Day morning.

Anyway, as I cycled, I got quite a pain. Just below my ribs on the left-hand side and down my left arm. I was more crouched over on this bike than my last and put it down to cycling in a different position and maybe a spot of, ahem, Christmas indigestion.

However, the pain carried on.

Over time I experimented with altering the seat height, swapping my bag onto the opposite shoulder, cycling slowly, sitting more upright etc. To be honest, I couldn’t really tell if anything was helping or not as I didn’t get the pain every day. When I did get it however, it was usually at the same point of my journey, after a slight incline. This was unusual in Portsmouth as being at sea level it’s mostly very flat. At the point it happened there was handily a bench and I would pull over and take 5 until the pain subsided. After this I’d be fine. I didn’t get the pain at work or when cycling home. Cycling to band practice and then drumming in the evening was also pain free. It was for this reason that I wasn’t too concerned. I very rarely had breakfast and had generally had a beer or glass of wine the night before. I explained it away as some sort of culturus bifidus unusualness which wasn’t really life inhibiting enough to bother doing anything about.

My job at this time was as Store Manager of a health and beauty store in a busy shopping centre. I loved my job. Retail is a pretty thankless and underpaid career. But that doesn’t take away the fact that I, and plenty of others like me, do love it. You get to meet people and play shop, with like minded retail loving suckers. And you get to move stuff around all day which, according to Nick Cave, is something creatives love doing. It can be a really good laugh. Tiring, relentless, hard on the feet, unsociable on the hours, rubbishly paid, sometimes thanklessly demanding from head office as well as the rudeness of some customers. But day to day, it’s a very life affirming real time existence dealing with real things and real people.

One beautiful sunny morning my new area manager Maggie arrived. There were the standard expectant customers, two crates of delivery and a flagon of dirty hand washing water. Just another day in health and beauty retail. We administered beauty treatments on the shop floor to wow the customers with our wares but the sinks on the shop floor weren’t plumbed in. Hence we were forever carrying large water carriers of clean or dirty water between these sinks and the taps in the back room.

Maggie and I went through various things in the office and then she suggested we went out for a coffee.

And there it was – that epiphany moment. Sitting in Nero’s coffee shop opposite Maggie, and having a sudden and striking realisation that I would be losing my job within the next 6 months. I’d had a similar feeling before. Sitting around a campfire drinking cider and realising that my first marriage was over. They were both moments of absolute clarity and presence. A singularity of understanding. Interestingly, although both realisations were devastating at the time, neither of them have actually done me much harm in the long run.

The last I knew from the previous business owners, was that our store was doing really well and I’d been given a pay rise and keep up the good work kind of feedback. Bring on a complete structural change of the company. We’re talking CEO, head of retail, new loss prevention department and a shuffle round of area managers and here I am, face no longer apparently fitting in the new shiny corporate world.

I was being bandied with phrases such as ‘If there was another store we could send you to….’ and ‘I wouldn’t want to lose you but…’ and all the while she kept saying eat your pannini it’s going cold. Eat my fucking pannini! I felt sick to my stomach as all this had come completely out of the blue for me. She’d bought me lunch and was now psychologically unhinging my world. I had no words or appetite. In recognition of the fact that she may have had a human soul immovably encased in her icy neo liberalist exterior (there, I’ve got that out of my system), at one point she did have a tear in her eye. I reached out and touched her hand. I am most definitely my own worst enemy.

Maggie proceeded to efficiently fill out three pages of pre written objectives for me:

Thou shalt not make thine own signs for thy shoppe

Thou shalt not request a higher stationery budget per month than thine allotted amount (despite dealing with 80% more customers on a regular basis than the majority of stores in the region)

Thou shalt achieve a conversion of 30%…

This was clever. Conversion in retail speak is the number of transactions that ker-ching through your till as a percentage of the number of people who ker-plunk through the front door. We had two doors. Simply closing one door would decrease the number of people entering the store and up our conversion but I wasn’t generally into playing durty retail to fix the figures.

As Maggie waffled on I really did sit there thinking holy crap, I am being performance managed. I know how this works. I get my objectives and will have a defined amount of time to achieve them. Most of this is pretty achievable but the conversion is cleverly the one thing I can’t see myself changing at my store.

We were well placed in a busy shopping centre. People flooded in all day. 30% of potential customers entering the shop and actually buying something may not seem like much of an ask. But an average conversion for a lot of shops is more like 10%. Ours was currently 16% measured by a footfall counter over the two doors to record how many people entered the shop. We could have 1000 people through the door in a day, in groups of friends, families, coach trips, so to do 160 transactions in a day for luxury and mostly giftable goods rather than anything essential is actually quite a win. And as a team we worked our butts off to get those sales.

I could fight this or I could walk away.

The thing is I couldn’t really see when I’d have time to fight. I was already working way over my contracted hours most weeks just to keep up with the expectations of the company and the shopping centre we were based in.

I went home that night and told Bassalot who laughed and was genuinely really proud of me. For all my coloured hair styles and punk rock drummer attitude I’m actually pretty well behaved and a really hard worker. For me to be performance managed did just seem completely ridiculous and, I guess, was gonna be an experience. I supposed I would have to look for another job. I’m sure B wouldn’t still be laughing when my money ran out and I ‘needed’ more boots…

Maggie left. I hated her. I’ve only hated one person in my life before. Slagwhoreworm, who was the culmination of epiphany moment #1, at the end of my first marriage. Bassalot says hate is a very strong word. And, of course, he’s right. I don’t want to hate any other human being. We’re all getting by and dealing with our own shit in our own way.

But Maggie was so inhuman about her delivery and, now I think about it, she never offered to help or guide me to her way of doing things. Just immediately came in and threw the book at me. I’m not naïve enough to think it was only her decision. My going was part of a bigger strategy in the competitive neo-liberalist world we now seem to inhabit.

But honestly, I can truly say that if anyone deserved a good hating that day, it was Maggie.

Chapter #3, Angel of Death is available now!!

Chapter #3 angel of death – slayer – 1986

heart surgery

Maybe if I lost my job I’d have time to sort out niggling health issues.

The pains I’d experienced were getting more noticeable. As the weather got colder it certainly affected me most mornings. I used to go ice skating with a friend called Freya. I’m not sure we did anything that resembled ice skating but it was good fun to slide round the ice for an hour chatting. I noticed it when I was ice skating as well. Maybe it was the cold.

I made a careful effort to feel exactly where the pain was when it came on. It was always in the same place, just at the bottom of my ribs on the left hand side. A quick google to check my anatomy map told me this was pretty much where my stomach was. So eventually I did go to the doctor and say I had a stomach ache. She gave it a good prod to no avail as it wasn’t actually hurting at the time. She prescribed some anti gastric juices meds and off I went. Freya had had similar pains in her stomach and arm which was acid reflux and on the tablets, her pains went away.

Anyway, the tablets seemed to be working.

Seemed to be. Or it could have been that I was getting a lot of lifts in to work with Bassalot. This was directly because it was less painful than cycling. I loved cycling. Purely as a means of transport rather than for pleasure at the weekend or anything. I loved cycling, like a bat out of hell, especially cutting through the cross wind on Southsea common on the way to work. Sometimes it was so windy that it seemed to whisk the oxygen away from your face as you tried to breathe it in. My point being, that the physical exertion brought on the pain. So, after a while, if I could get a lift, I would.

The doctor sent me for an endoscopy. Wow. Poking a camera down my throat right the way into my stomach to see what was going on. I was more than a little fascinated. I realise by now I had become properly concerned about the pains. So although the nurse thought I was scared about the endoscopy, it was actually the possible results that could come from the procedure that was phasing me.

I was surprised that I was taken into what looked like an operating theatre. I think there were three people in there and they brought in a large can of Nitrous Oxide a medical grade version of laughing gas also used in cream chargers. The tiny metal refill canisters which were generally found littering campsites at festivals. It is called laughing gas after all and the second most commonly used recreational drug in England and Wales after cannabis.

I really failed to grasp the significance of this or how much it would have helped the situation if I’d inhaled a whole lot more that afternoon. They told me to take a few good lungfulls and then they’d feed the camera down my oesophagus and into my stomach to have a good look around. The important thing was to relax. Gottit. I’m pretty good at doing what I’m told.

I had it down. Camera; gullet; literally. Hardcore is my middle name, but honestly, that was pretty intense. They dimmed the lights and I remember being lain on my side and one of the guys actually putting his hand on my cheek. It felt really comforting although he may have been holding me down if I was kicking off, who knows. It felt exactly as you might imagine having a camera on the end of a tube slid down your throat. Mind you I am glad it wasn’t up my arse. But now I get what the nitrous oxide was for and given my time over again I would have had a damn sight more few good lungfulls before taking that on – or in.

After the procedure I was chatting to a neighbour, Janice, who had also had an endoscopy. I told her I had found the whole thing quite uncomfortable, at which point she said ‘Oh I had plenty of gas, I couldn’t feel a thing’.

‘?’

I was genuinely actually quite taken aback. Janice, to whom recreational drugs would have been a complete anathema had got shit faced enough on laughing gas that she hadn’t felt the endoscopic camera worming down her intestine. Janice, devoted Daily Mail reader and Brexit voter had literally had the hit of the whole fruit compared to me. I vowed to do better.

The result: my oesophagus and stomach were absolutely fine, no sign of any cancers and my stomach lining was peachy. Brilliant! But also left the question, why did I get such bad pains. I’d managed to build it up in my head that this was the test that would reveal all. My maternal grandmother had died of stomach cancer before I was born and, let’s face it, who isn’t drinking too many units of alcohol these days. But I was OK. As I left, one of the guys said it sounded as if the pain might be skeletal. So back I went to my GP’s.

Meanwhile, I was being performance managed to within an inch of my sanity at work. It was almost a laughable situation (were it not so serious). I’d started at this store as an Assistant Manager and then become Manager. I’m probably not really a manager in the corporate understanding of the word. Sure, I can manage things. All my paperwork’s done on time, I’m considerate to my staff and their lives outside of work, I get a kick out of chasing targets and beating them and coming up with engaging ways of doing this as a team. Have I mentioned I love moving things about? In retail this is called merchandising, and without a doubt, this is something I am shit hot at. But, I am not a bitch. And in retail, more and more, this is what you are expected to be as a store manager. One regional manager at a previous post even told me this.

“I expect all my visual managers to be bitches.” I might as well have packed my bags then.

I had my first hearing. Myself and Maggie and a witness and note writer, our new company Loss Prevention Manager. He was ok, I knew him from before as a store manager. I could take someone along myself if I wished. I had joined a trade union, in a bit of a panic, but it was too soon for them to become involved in this case. My rep did give me really good advice though on the telephone. My other option was to take a work colleague. I didn’t want to take anyone who worked with me at my store. I hadn’t told them about my performance management. They didn’t have much love for our area manager anyway and I always resisted making it an us and them fest with head office. It wasn’t productive to the working environment. At work I generally wanted to do a good job and get back to my life outside retail. And the time I got to do this in was getting less and less. I did ask a manager from another store to come to the hearing with me. She was lovely and agreed straight away. At the final hour though I realised I didn’t really want to put her through it either. It was her company too and she’d have to keep working there after I’d potentially left. I didn’t want head office to think any less of her for siding with me. So I repped for myself and did a bloody good job.

As I had been given about twenty objectives on epiphany day, I had the exact homework I needed to do. I took each point thrown at me, researched the facts and figures I needed and basically had a well evidence backed answer for everything. And it wasn’t even cocky, flappy or lying. It was fact.

I was given another, much smaller list of objectives and told I would get a date for the next hearing in about 5 weeks time.

Once again I am my own worst enemy. I am infinitely capable but will never push myself forward. In front of another human being mostly, as I don’t see myself as any better or worse or more deserving than anyone else. But I am small and blonde and female and am treated very much as such. I won’t say I don’t play to this as well. There’s a certain amount of I can get away with anything precisely because I’m small and blonde and female. But it really goes against you in any position of authority. People become genuinely alarmed if I start making decisions and the small blonde one becomes ‘difficult’ or ‘feisty’. I think that being capable and good at my job means getting on with it and not shouting loudly about what you’re doing all the time. But you really do have to shout loudly at work or you get walked all over. I think even Maggie started to see that I was actually doing a good job in desperate retail circumstances but it was never going to work out between us. Interestingly, the company managed out the managers from the three highest turnover stores. I was one of a cull. And now not one of those stores is still there.

I would say that from the first hearing I had met every one of Maggie’s ridiculous objectives – except improving conversion. She lowered the goal post from 30% to 20%. This was actually way more achievable, but, like I say, I was pretty much over the whole fight by now. I felt massively unjustly treated like I can’t really put into words. If I think about it too much I am still venomously angry. I knew I was in a very fortunate situation. Bassalot would support me if I didn’t have another job to go to. I don’t have any children or dependants who rely on me and my wages and ultimately I could always go to my parents for money. I don’t, but I know they’re there. I am really aware that not everyone has that and I am so angry that corporations can play with people’s lives. For some people what was happening to me could have been a complete financial and personal disaster.

I told the team at work a limited version of events and that if our conversion didn’t get to 20%, I’d had it. I’d decided to leave by this point anyway. There was no way on this earth that I was going to sit through another hearing and justify myself to that unpleasant human being. My plan was to wait until the date came through for my next hearing and then hand my notice in. The team were amazing! Through fair means and foul our conversion crept towards the mythical 20% and the whole situation was becoming more and more surreal. I was good at this and still being managed out.

Physically I was a wreck. Bassalot says every year at Xmas I finally crawl home on Xmas Eve and he rebuilds me and packs me back off to work inevitably on Boxing Day or the day after to deal with the sales. Normally at Xmas I was a feisty wreck but this year I was a broken wreck. The constant crap I was getting for everything we were achieving was like some sort of bizarre reverse punishment.

The date came through for my final hearing. I phoned Maggie first thing in the morning. There was no answer but she phoned me back and I did the deed and handed in my notice. I arranged to stay until December 20th. My first Xmas not working in retail for about 15 years. Maggie said did I feel better now I’d told her.

In my head:

“NO YOU FUCKWIT BECAUSE I DON’T WANT TO LEAVE ANYWAY!”

Some people.

Because I hadn’t really told the team what had been going on, my leaving genuinely came as quite a shock. One girl started crying tears of happiness for me for getting out which was pretty sweet. She left a couple of months later. It was all a bit of a haze. I played the game for the final five weeks. Still conscientiously trying to get everything done. I had no wish to leave any of the team with shit to deal with after I’d gone or the new manager, whoever they might be, for that matter. Maggie got in a new assistant manager a week before I left so I had someone to hand over to. Then Maggie announced she would be coming down on my last day. A Sunday. The Sunday before Xmas.

I know people have real traumas that they have to go through in life. Bassalot’s charity, Music Fusion, is testament to some of the circumstances that young people have to grow up in. However that Sunday was genuinely one of the worst days of my life. By this time I was empty inside. Actually hollowed out. Maggie arrived with chocolate and flowers. Really?? I just sucked the whole thing up. We did a hand over and store walk with the new assistant manager. We needed signs for the post Xmas sale and Maggie said, just print some up. Print some up??? Her own objectives meant so little to her now. I was lost for words. I don’t think I heard anything else she was saying and within half an hour she’d left anyway. I had a bit of a sob in the loo. Nobody, and I mean nobody, reduces me to tears. Way to go Maggie.

I stepped out to greet life beyond corporate retail.

Heart stuff gets a bit more dodgy next week – chapter #4 Evil Magnet, here Monday 16th September xx

Chapter #4 evil magnet – toxic rabbit – 2008

heart surgery

Following my endoscopy, I had booked another appointment at my GPs. With the NHS, in order to get a health problem diagnosed you have to be referred to a specialist by your GP. So after every test that proved negative, I was bounced back to my GP before embarking on the next line of enquiries. Not the most efficient use of everyone’s time, but a workable method. I’m not sure how else I’d do it. There was always a wait between appointments and this meant that I had now been in the system, for about a year, with no resolution.

I didn’t see my usual doctor. I’d taken the first available appointment I could get rather than going to someone I knew. The surgery was over run as another doctor had been called out on an emergency and I got an incredibly young limp handshake kind of a guy. I tried to explain what had happened thus far and that endoscopy guy had suggested my problems may be skeletal and could I please be booked in for a chest X-ray. The doctor wasn’t having any of this. He said under no circumstance would he book me in for a chest X-ray and that I should buy some Voltarol and go home. The situation was laughable but however many times I tried to explain that I had now had this pain for 18 months, he would not budge on his diagnosis. I did what he said but fairly obviously the Voltarol did nothing for me.

I made an appointment with my usual GP next time, which was a wait of about two weeks and got my referral for a chest X-ray.

In the wait for chest X-ray, Post Office gate happened.

So we were dealing with a seizure. I’ve never blacked out in my life before. It’s kind of not a Lucy thing to do. I get massive FOMO (fear of missing out) so the likelihood of me missing anything by blacking out is fairly minimal. Even if I felt myself blacking out I would hang on to my senses with the strength of an ox rather than give in to what my body is telling me would be a good idea. I’ll happily be the last one at the party or the pub or event. It’s not that I’m being the life and soul of it, it’s just that if life’s happening I want to be there and not asleep.

The consultant at the hospital said I’d need a brain MRI scan although my CT scan had been clear. I left hospital clutching some ECG heart monitor print outs clearly saying ‘lead fault’ in places. My heart though was never mentioned as an area of concern.

It was a strange time. Something had obviously gone wrong but I was just sent home to get on with things. I don’t think I could have convincingly gone back to my previous job in full time retail. The pains I’d felt whilst cycling and walking were now ten times worse than before the black out and although B had told the hospital about my chest pains, nothing much had been mentioned about them since. It was just a matter of course for anyone who’d had a seizure to then have a brain MRI.

After my night in hospital I phoned the GP to explain that I needed an appointment as I was still getting my pains and had now blacked out completely and spent the night in hospital. The receptionist just didn’t take on board the magnitude of what I was saying and I couldn’t get an appointment for another week and a half! I was actually devastated, put the phone down and sobbed. I did know it must be something serious as Lucys just didn’t black out like that.

I was duly summoned for my brain MRI scan. I’d googled the whole procedure and knew it would be pretty claustrophobic. I’d recently read Viv Albertine’s book and it had completely done her head in as the claustrophobia was so intense. I shrink wrapped myself in steely resolve. I’d only just arrived at the hospital with B when they called me in.

It was a big old machine and I had to lie down on my back. My head was wedged in between foamy panels to keep it still and a panic button was placed in my left hand which my thumb could operate if I needed out. I’m guessing a few people did. Some kind of shield was then pulled down over my face. There was a perspex panel in front of my eyes so I would have been able to see something. As I wheeled slowly forward into the imposing doughnut, the tube I was entering became smaller and smaller and I just shut my eyes and focused big time on breathing. I don’t even get claustrophobic. I remember caving when on an outward bounds course as a kid and going through some cave fixture called ‘The Letterbox’. The battery pack I was wearing on my belt got wedged and for a while I was stuck in a really confined shelf space. It was a bit unnerving for a minute but I had no reason not to trust the adults I was with to not be able to get me out of there. Had I been caving for kicks and exploring new ‘Letterbox’ fixtures as yet un-posted by other cavers, I might have panicked. But I was on an organised school trip, I presumed it was obviously safe.

Much the same here. My rationale was that thousands of people had this procedure all the time and obviously the doctors weren’t gonna wheel me into some machine which was going to crush or extrude me. I just had to keep breathing and maybe not open my eyes just yet.

Then the noises started. As far as I knew I was in some kind of massive magnet which would line up all the cells in my body so that photos could be taken. This is completely non harmful to the human body, unlike an X-ray. So I guess the noises are the magnet circling round you doing it’s thing. It’s properly loud mechanical industrial regular noises, first one sequence, then another and then another. And even incorporates something that sounds like a clown hooter – I wondered if the doctors were messing with me at that point. I was aware of footsteps walking round at times – over the din. I was reassuringly told I was doing really well and would soon be done. I have absolutely no idea how long I was in there. It must have been 20 minutes. I did enjoy the industrial soundtrack but really had to keep focused on my breathing or I would have felt quite nauseous. At one point I felt brave enough to sneak a peek and open my eyes. I could see through my visor tho can’t actually remember exactly what. I think some kind of screen although it could have been a reflection of something. It felt like being on the space shuttle in some kind of astronauts pod – as obviously I know what that feels like. It’s weird when they said we were nearly done as I started thinking about time again. When I didn’t know how long it was going to take I was completely in the moment of the experience itself. The doctor’s voice broke the seal on that moment and I was aware it would end soon but it felt like ages compared to what I’d already been through.

Finally I was reversed out of there. I joined B outside and he said my eye brows were raised so high he thought someone had squeezed my anal gland. Love is. No results straight away for this one, they would be in touch.

I couldn’t even walk to work now without getting a crippling pain and having to stop at some point during the journey. B and his mate have a band called Obsidian Sun and I was going to do some drumming with them at our anniversary party. At the practice I had to stop after one track. Very un-Lucy like behaviour. The worst I had was walking home from work one day. I dutifully pulled over into some dappled sunlight on the pavement when the pain attacked, and knowing what I know now, possibly had a small heart attack there and then. When it passed I carried on home.

When I did finally make it to the GPs, she referred me to the chest pain clinic straight away – as an urgent case. Tell that to the receptionist.

Not really realising that coronary heart disease statistically was up there with cancer as a world killer, I arrived in Cardiology at Portsmouth Queen Alexander hospital with more wide-eyed curiosity than a doom cloud of this-is-the-end hanging over me. I certainly didn’t really know what coronary heart disease was, or a heart bypass for that matter. I was about to be educated. My GP had said I would be wired up to an ECG and then put on a treadmill. This seemed to be the first sensible test idea since I started with the diagnostics as I only ever felt the pains when I was physically moving, walking or cycling.

This didn’t actually happen. I did have an ECG which showed up a slight murmur. I was told I would get a heart monitor to wear for five days during which time I would keep a pain diary. Based on these results they would decide what course of action to take. I was impressed with their urgent list as from here things did happen fairly quickly.

I went in a few days later and had a heart monitor literally stuck to my chest over my heart and a few electrodes stuck on my torso. The whole thing could be unpoppered from sticky patches so you could bath and shower. With this on I carried on as normal for 5 days. Typically I didn’t have any monumental pain in this time. The worst was possibly in Tesco unpacking the trolley onto the conveyor belt – very glad I didn’t pop my clogs there and then. Totally un rock and roll.

I handed the monitor and diary back in at the end of the week and that was that.

My next two tests came in on the same day the next week. I assured B I was fine and he dropped me off on the way to work. I had an ultrasound early morning and an angiogram afterwards at about 11am. I’d had an ultrasound previously on my thyroid which apparently was nobbly, but ok it turned out, so knew what to expect. Slimy goo over my chest and a monitor pressed down quite hard in various places of interest. The good thing about an ultrasound is no risk and instant results. Fairly speedily, the radiologist (?) informed me that my heart was the right shape and all my valves were working correctly. Woopy doo. I half thought about cancelling my angiogram there and then. What else could possibly be wrong with such a positive ultrasound result. Me and my medical knowledge – astounding!

I had a couple of hours to kill so took in the delights of Cosham park and market then headed back to hospital.

An angiogram is far more invasive than an ultrosound. I was gowned up and cathetered and felt properly hospitalised. I was going to have some kind of radioactive dye pumped through my veins and was told I may feel as if I needed to go the toilet and get a metallic taste in my mouth. What I’ve learned about doctors and nurses is that if they say you may feel blah blah blah, then yes, you definitely will feel blah blah blah. But you will feel it ten times more than the bright and laid back way in which they say it. It’s called a bedside manner and it’s done so as not to freak you out so I’m down with that.

I’m up next when a bed arrives from Southampton. It has a patient on it and two porters accompanying presumably the patient rather than the bed. Although beds are that precious, it could have been the bed that they were after. Anyway, it transpired that the porters can’t leave the patient who needs this procedure urgently so I’m politely told that I’ll need to wait while she goes in first. Fine by me. I’ve had a sneaky look at the room I’m going in to. It looks like a bed so I’ll be lying down and being shunted through a disc like a doughnut again. There are a lot of flowers and woodland scenes on light-walls around the machine. Quite a serene room really.

Finally I’m good to go. I lie on the bed and the medics (I really don’t know if they’re nurses, doctors or consultants so no offence meant when I use the term medics) give me my instructions. They’ll be in the next room (unlike an ultrasound, X-rays can be harmful boys and girls) and I’ll be able to hear their instructions through a speaker. Basically breathe deeply as instructed.

In all honesty I could barely hear what they were saying but one thing I definitely missed was them saying the dye was on its way. I presumed the dye would be coursing through my veins for the entire procedure. But no. Suddenly I had the overwhelmingly hot feeling that I was weeing uncontrollably. I properly had to check when I got up that I really hadn’t.

So that was that. I had my catheter taken out and got the bus to work. Again, unlike an ultrasound, the results for an angiogram are not instant. I would maybe hear something or maybe not, if everything was ok.

Next week’s is a bit brutal – tune in at 6.10pm on Monday 23rd September for Black is my Heart (Nemesis) – Cradle of Filth 2004

Chapter #5 black is my heart (nemesis) – cradle of filth – 2004

heart surgery

Exactly a week after my previous two cardiac diagnostics, I got a ‘phonecall from the hospital saying could I go back in for a follow up appointment. I don’t remember how they crowbarred the word stent into the sentence but they did. The appointment was for the next day. I texted my friend Nikki straight away as I was due to meet up for beers that afternoon. I figured I could do the hospital appointment at 10am, pop into work at Pegasus afterwards and sort the post out before meeting Nikki at the pub. I’d been for so many diagnostics by this point I wasn’t giving much thought to it or even what ‘it’ (this diagnostic) was. The previous week I thought I’d had an angiogram and this is what I’d thought they’d said I was having tomorrow. A follow up angiogram, presumably to doublecheck something. About a week after this procedure I received a letter, the gist of which said:

… I have had a look at your CT scan and there looks like there might be a narrowing at the beginning of one of your heart arteries. This may be the cause of your symptoms. I have taken the liberty of placing you onto the urgent waiting list for an angiogram and I enclose some literature regarding the procedure.

There wasn’t actually any literature enclosed with the letter. Although as I received the letter way after the event anyway, I already knew plenty about the procedure by then. Its good to know that the NHS urgent waiting list is a good deal quicker (by at least a week) than it’s postal system.

I assured B he’d be fine to drop me off on the way to work and I’d make my own way home on the bus.

As soon as I got to cardiology at QA I was shown onto a ward and sat on a bed. So far OK, although normally there’s a waiting room and the previous angiogram hadn’t involved my own bed. It sort of transpired that I was on a day ward, a fairly busy day ward at that. The lady in the bed next to me was having a pacemaker fitted for example and the guy to the other side of me was groaning a lot. A nurse bustled in and gave me a gown to put on and some paper pants. She said to leave my clothes by the side of the bed. I obliged and when she got back I asked her what exactly was happening to me today. She briskly said I’d be having an angiogram (which I swear was what I’d had the previous week and certainly didn’t involve wearing paper pants). So I asked about the paper pants. She replied that, if appropriate, they could put a stent in my heart today (!!) and they’d probably go in through my wrist but in case it had to be the groin, I was wearing paper pants. A STENT IN TODAY!! I pretty much gave up trying to figure out where my day was going but knew I wouldn’t be going to work or the pub or making my own way home. In fact a couple of nurses had asked if I was there on my own and implied that I really would need a lift home. Hells Bells!

The beauty of mobile phone technology is that from the relative comfort of my own day bed and whilst wearing paper pants I could change all my arrangements for the day. Work was fine, they could get cover. I tried to keep it bright and breezy with Bassalot and just mention a stent in passing and the fact that I probably would need a lift home after all. He, of course, said he’d be there as soon as he could be. Then I messaged Nikki saying we may have to postpone our beer date. She said FUCKING HELL – let me know if you need anything. I said “Beer – soon!”

Logistics sorted, I settled back to wait for what was about to happen. The nurse popped in a couple of times again saying I may have a bit of a wait before I went in as it was a particularly busy day. Finally a consultant came in to have a chat and get me to sign a consent form. I was having what’s known as a ‘procedure’. In fact a few consultants came in. A really proper cardiologist who implied I was way too young to be in there. The cardiologist I’d seen in the chest pain clinic who’d sorted out all the tests for me thus far. Then a consultant with a sparkle in his eye came in and said they’d try and put a stent in me today which would sort out the problem and I’d be on my way. The thing is, my chest pain cardiologist, a gently spoken big black guy was explaining everything when old sparkly eyes came in. He immediately started talking over everybody else and speaking very loudly and slowly to the black guy. I could only assume he was a massive racist although it turned out, during the procedure, that he spoke to everyone like that and was generally just a wanker. Obviously a highly skilled wanker who could potentially fix my heart but there’s really no need for rudeness.

Finally I was lying down on the bed and was wheeled to a room a few doors away. There were maybe 5 medical staff in there, a large light (alien autopsy style like you’d get in an operating theatre) and a large wide screen television. I still had very little understanding of what was actually going to happen to me. As it turned out, this was really for the best. My right arm had a rest to lean on to the side of me and I was given a handle to hold on to with my right hand which was perpendicular to the floor. I had to keep hold of this and turn my wrist 90 degrees to the right keeping my arm in the armrest. Everyone seemed really pleased that I’d done this correctly. I was told I’d get a local anaesthetic and felt the scratch. Lots of talking ensued, and true to my way of getting through this shit. I really didn’t think too closely about what was actually happening. And thanks to the local anaesthetic I didn’t feel anything either. Eventually we struck gold and on the widescreen in front of me I could see the arteries of my own beating heart! I know medical people see this all the time but to me this was quite amazing.

The thing was, it didn’t seem to be quite right. Not that I could obviously see anything unusual. It was more what I was hearing. The “This is really interesting” comments and the “Um, these arteries are unlike anything I have ever seen” and generally the things you don’t really want doctors to be saying. Then, the disappearing behind a see through screen to have a discussion which I could no longer hear. And then the verdict.

“Well, it appears you have a narrowing of the same artery in two places but immediately after the narrowing, it gets very wide. We’ve never seen anything quite like this before. I’m not sure that a stent will be the best solution for you as it may not stay in place. A better option may be to open you up – how do feel about that?”

“Open you up”?? There’s a bedside manner right there.

All delivered in a fairly light hearted practical medical way. I wasn’t really in any position to deliver a witty, well thought out answer. Something was going all the way from my wrist to my heart so I couldn’t ‘flight’ and fighting seemed fairly out of the question.

“Will it stop the pain and can you fix it?” I asked – I really should’ve been at the pub by now!

“Oh we can fix anything, we just need to know exactly what the problem is.”

So that was that. Said tube was extracted from my arm. I was told I’d feel a little tug as it left my wrist. Mr Bright Eyes and the nurses had to attach some sort of deflating valve to my wrist as the artery had been enlarged to accommodate a sheath up which the catheter had been inserted. It needed to contract slowly over time and this is when I realised that Mr Bright Eyes was a complete nob end to the other members of staff in the room. Although he was however, charming to me. It turned out my wrists are really small so I needed a special kind of deflating valve – my own term. The nurses seemed completely competent at using these but Mr Bright Eyes second guessed and questioned them on everything. True to form, I decided not to look as various medics discussed how said valve should be attached to my arm. Neither did I check too closely when one guy brought over a good old fashioned string mop and began furiously mopping the floor under where my wrist had been. Honestly a mind can work overtime.

Soon, I was back on the day ward with my right hand shielded from my view by a lot of blue paper towels. Apparently, my case would be discussed at the cardiology meeting the next week in Southampton to get a second opinion on whether or not I should have a bypass operation. In the meantime, they would sort out some drugs to control the pains I’d been getting and I could pretty much carry on as normal – which was a lot slower than usual anyway.

It was actually incredibly euphoric finally knowing something was wrong and what it was. This balanced with the fact that I was going to have to have a bypass operation at the age of 47. People kept mentioning that I was far too young to be there. I finally pointed out that I was actually 47 which to me doesn’t actually seem that young anymore. However, looking around the cardiology ward, I could see their point.

Bassalot was there looking greener than anticipated. From my texts, he’d been able to Google the procedure they were going to carry out on me. It obviously wasn’t pretty although his imagination is more sensory than mine is practical. I kept my hand obscured. The deal was that the valve had to be made smaller every 30 mins by 1mm at a time down from, I think 6mm. This meant I was there for a good 2-3 hours while the wrist contraption size was decreased and then some more time to make sure all was ok.

On one of the final checks one of the nurses thought my vein was feeling a little hard further up my arm. They checked it again after 30 minutes and finally we worked out that it was probably actually my drumming arm and hence muscle rather than solid vein so really nothing to worry about. It was lucky as we nearly had to get old Bright Eyes over and as we and the nurses agreed, it would be easier all round not to get him involved.

Finally it was drugs time! I was now on:

 an Aspirin a day to thin my blood
 a dose of Statins a day to reduce my blood cholesterol level (although in my ‘You are now 45’ health check my blood cholesterol level was tested to be negligible giving me a 1-2% chance of having a heart attack)
 Bisoprolol once a day to regulate my heart beat and reduce adrenalin (although I’m possibly one of the least flapable people I know)
 something, the name of which escapes me, to stop my angina pains.

I’m not sure how I feel about all this either. It seems like a lot of drugs to be taking when I’ve never been on prescription drugs before (except the pill for a while) or even had a course of antibiotics. In fact, I’ve been asked several times in hospital whilst having my tests, “What medication are you on?” and when I say none, nobody really seems quite sure what to make of it.

We finally made it home, ordered a take out, a box of Quality Street and a magazine and hit the sack.

We’ll think about all this tomorrow.

Chapter 6, Sugar Coated Bitter Truth, coming at you next Monday 30th September – tune in!

Chapter #6 sugar coated bitter truth – slaves – 2013

heart surgery

It was about a week before I received the letter.

It said after discussing the results of my angiogram with colleagues at Southampton, a by-pass operation would be a better form of treatment for me than stenting and I had been referred to a consultant at Southampton. Pretty conclusive then.

I had another appointment at the brain clinic although by now we pretty much knew what the problem was. My seizure was described as provoked, secondary most likely to some kind of cardiac event leading to syncope and a head injury. And my brain MRI was normal – hooray, just my heart then. We did purchase a CD though with my brain scan pictures on it. Spooky stuff, seeing the profile of your own face with your brain behind it.

It was probably about time to google heart bypass operation. I was, vainly and with no apology, fairly preoccupied by the scar that I may have after this. I’ve got three tattoos, the latest one I had done this March. Building up to it I’d been watching a programme called tattoo fixers on TV. A lady on the show had been in to the pop up ‘studio’ having had heart surgery several years before and had had a delicate rose tattooed over her scar. Heart surgery to me then had sounded pretty serious and she had a long scar reaching from her mid chest, straight down her cleavage. I hadn’t thought much then about what had happened beneath the scar.

So the first thing I googled wasn’t actually heart bypass operation but heart bypass operation scars – images. Well, google doesn’t deliver bedside manner images. If that’s what you ask for, that’s what you get. Realms of them. Mostly on guys and, I now know, mostly quite fresh as given 12-18 months many scars fade to barely noticeable. I read an account by Arnold Schwartzenegger who, when he was told he needed heart surgery, had said to his doctor just book me somewhere in Mexico and have done with it. If I tell my wife she’ll want to talk about it all the time. Then she’ll tell her Mum who’ll want to talk about it all the time. Just do the op and then I’ll go home. His doctor had pointed out that he would have an 8 inch scar down his chest and possibly his wife would notice so maybe he should tell her in advance.

I thought about the scar for a long time. I mean, days, weeks, not just hours. Way more probably than actually considering what would be going on under the scar. Weirdly, I actually quite like my boobs and chest. I’m not particularly a cleavage girl but was aware that 90% of my wardrobe would show my scar. There were various articles on line about how different women felt about their scars. Generally, as a guy I would imagine, it’s quite a macho thing to have a massive chest scar. As a woman, not so much. However, as an alternative woman and a drummer in a punk band I kind of came round to the fact that it was gonna be and look pretty damn cool – and was, of course, a tattoo opportunity for the future.

So, what exactly did a heart bypass operation entail? It’s pretty much like a road by pass and diverts blood around narrowed or clogged parts of the major heart arteries. A surgeon will use a blood vessel from another area of the body and graft / sew this on around the damaged area. The original artery remains in place. Literally a by pass is created.

I didn’t realise this before my operation but I actually had a severe blockage of the left anterior descending artery. This artery supplies the heart with 80% of it’s blood and runs down the outside of the left hand side of the heart. It is the main heart artery and heart attacks involving it are sometimes called the widow maker. I’m pretty glad I didn’t actually have this much information before I went in for surgery. Or if I had I may not actually have moved for the time between diagnosis and surgery. The whole thing is pretty fascinating though. If I was younger, being a bit handy with a needle and thread, I might well have considered retraining to be a surgeon. As it was though, 7 years at med school now and the cost alone, window dressing seems by far the easy option. I couldn’t find one female heart surgeon out there though. Not that I wanted too particularly, I just find these things interesting.

The part I most had to accept / deny was the cutting through the breastbone. I knew I’d be heavily sedated. I’d had general anaesthetic on two previous occasions so had no worries about waking up mid op or feeling anything. Before my first operation, to remove a gangleon from my hand, a work colleague had described a general anaesthetic she’d had as feeling like the best sleep she’d ever had. I have to say she was right and it was good advice for allaying any fears. But it is typical that to get to my heart, the surgeon would have to saw through my sternum for fucks sake. That’s just not a good thought. I don’t even think it would be a good thought for a heart surgeon if they had to have a heart operation. It’s possibly one of those things you shouldn’t have to consider as a human being. I was quite fascinated as a kid by the Aztecs sacrificing their victims by pulling out their still beating hearts. It was all seeming a bit too close to home now.

However, I do take my hat off to the older guys I’ve known and who my parents and friends have known who’ve had to go through any sort of heart surgery. It seems kind of accepted that a percentage of older guys will have to have heart surgery, they’re usually the demographic. But I now feel bad that I’ve never known what a heart by pass was and it must be just as bloody terrifying for them as it is for me now. Cutting through your sternum is gonna require a saw, right? Just before going into hospital I’d bought the Slaves new album and I think the track’s called ‘Play Dead’ and at the end there’s the sound of a chain or circular saw along with a guy demonically laughing – still makes me feel a bit queasy…

My other slightly interesting development was having to take medication every day. I know, I know loads of people do but I never have. I only take paracetamol or ibuprofen for a particularly hectic headache or period pain and the thought of being on pills every day now was quite strange. I put off starting to take them for a few days. Then I sat down with all the cautions and side effects and worked out which ones needed food and particular times to take them. I would take my statin, bisopropalol and half the angina tablet in the morning. The aspirin had to be taken with food and as my breakfast habits were a little sporadic I decided I’d take this one in the evening with the second half of the angina tablet.

The pharmacist at the hospital had said the angina tablets worked by keeping the blood vessels open. However, this wasn’t just in the heart but all over the body. Especially in the head so I could potentially expect headaches. Well, yes, I’d call that a headache. Not like a normal headache tho, really even and distinctly pharmaceutical in nature, and wrapped around the bottom of the back of the head. Also, annoyingly, this was the tablet that I had to take in two halves over the course of the day so once in the morning and once in the evening I had to swallow something that I knew was going to cause pain. It was a bit like a Pavlovian puppy response. I was caught in a loop of just shifting the headache then having to start another one. It seemed worse at night when for about three hours it would take a grip and I’d just have to lie there, awake, knowing it would shift at about 3am to have to start it all again in about 6 hours time. And drinking. Med taking has certainly shelved that little habit. Basically it just makes you feel pants. Light headed, like drunk really quickly and not in a good way. More headaches, hot flushes, dry mouthed – fun, fun fun!

But don’t get me wrong. I am supremely grateful to modern medicine as I haven’t mentioned the best thing of all about all these tablets. I don’t get my chest pains anymore. I mean, it feels incredible, after possibly 18 months of intermittent pains, to have been diagnosed correctly and for there to be pills out there to reverse my symptoms until I can have an operation to properly sort it out. I fully salute science and doctors for being on it today and for many years previously that I am able to benefit directly. And also to the many patients who didn’t make it in through the exploratory days of heart surgery so that I can survive today. Even so, I do feel pretty wiped out. The headaches remained severe every day for about three weeks and then gradually they started to recede. The hot flushes were really hot and took me by surprise every time when they came on with their severity. I still wasn’t entirely sure they weren’t menopausal as my periods by this time were almost non existent but the thought of tackling a menopause with the doctor right now as well as a heart condition was too much.

In all honesty menopause – you can wait.

Chapter #7 Waiting for the Nightboat available now!!

Chapter #7 waiting for the nightboat – duran duran 1981

heart surgery

My pre op was in Southampton on August 4th. I still didn’t have a date for the actual operation but this was my first visit to Southampton General since being referred there to be ‘opened up’.

I’ve been blessed thus far with a fairly healthy family and group of friends so hospitals haven’t been somewhere I’ve had to spend a large amount of time. I’ve got to know Portsmouth Queen Alexandra’s quite well with my own out patient activity but Southampton is a bit of another level.

The car park alone is quite imposing and the hospital double doors slide open to reveal – a shopping centre. Massive Costa to the left with barristas offering samples of sweet things, a WHSmith and some sort of clothes emporium selling dressing gowns and advertising for staff. Look beyond this and it’s down to business again with east and west Wings leading to all the usual suspects.

We found Cardiology in a temporary location and the X-Ray machine had broken down. It had been turned off and on again. A few people were in a makeshift waiting room and Bassalot and I added our spice it up Wired and a Vogue to the reading selection in the magazine rack. I used to keep all my Vogues and in the end needed a massive suitcase to move them around. I figured I’d never actually read old fashion (I mean really) so gave them all to the University of Portsmouth fashion department and since then have kept the chicest of the chic, but repatriated others to waiting rooms where there is reading material.

Finally we were a go with X-Rays. Then I had to breathe into various tubes and have an ECG. As we shuffled round various waiting and treatment areas, I began to recognise the same familiar faces waiting for the various tests. Murmurs of recognition began. Finally, wouldn’t you know, we were all called into the same room together for a group chat. We were given the basics of what to expect. We would get our operation date and come to hospital the day before. This was for a pre op, blood tests, swabs for MRSA etc. As the NHS were not heavy with beds shall we say, we would then return home for the evening and expect to be back in hospital the following day at 9am. Everyone having a cardiac operation was prepped first thing in the morning but there was a running order so you may not be operated on until the afternoon.

It was important to eat an iron rich diet pre-op in case a blood transfusion was required. We were all given a bottle of Hibi Scrub which is an antimicrobial wash we were to use once a day for five days before the operation and wash our hair in it at least once. We were then told we’d all get to speak to the consultant individually and a nurse who could answer any further questions.

We filed out and sat in another waiting room. We were quite a motley crew. There was the joker, ruddy faced who kind of looked like your average heart attack candidate. Rotund and stocky but there on his own. Everyone else had at least one person with them. He cracked a joke at most things that were said and when he mentioned his wife the nurse said incredulously ‘You’ve got a wife?!’ – how rude!

There was a tall grey haired guy, kind of businessey with a constantly talking auburn haired tanned and made up lady. She wanted to know everyone’s story (we certainly knew hers and how they’d already cancelled 2 holidays for this and her husband needed a quadruple bypass which they’d been led to believe was an emergency and were STILL waiting!). I guess it was partly nerves tho, it must be as hard in a different way for the nearest and dearest of people having serious operations. They’re awake for a start.

I kind of took the 5th amendment as I realised she was making her way round to me (or actually Bassalot – most heart operations are required by men so the assumption was that I was the companion). I assumed my role as youngster in the group and stared steadfastly at my phone so I didn’t have to do the show and tell. There was one other lady in the group who was much older and there with her daughter, and a couple (he was 57 as I heard him give his date of birth at reception although he dressed much younger). He was actually having a valve operation and they looked like a good honest party couple from the 90s.

Purely by merit of having arrived first that morning and being the guinea pig that got the X-ray machine working I was called in to see the consultant first.

Dr O: ‘Well firstly can I say that I am sorry you have to come in and see me today.’

Well how very refreshing! I haven’t known quite how to take it when you go into hospital for an outpatient diagnostic procedure and are greeted by ‘How are you?’

I know, logically, this is just something people say, but I’m obviously not all right as I’m in hospital for a diagnostic procedure. I’ve settled on saying “Well – I hope – haha’ at which point sometimes the medical person can look quite taken aback but I can only be honest – I have learned this from my asperger husband.

So I feel with Dr O we got off to a good start. Thanks to the wonders of Google and Southampton hospital’s website I knew that Dr O was pretty highly thought of. He was also an expert in an off pump coronary bypass operation which he had introduced to Southampton hospital. This meant that the heart was kept beating during the operation generally leading to a speedier recovery. He drew a basic diagram showing where my blockage was and explained that rather than taking a vein from the leg he should be able to use an existing chest cavity artery that he would simply graft on to my heart. Did I say simply? This should result in a smaller chest scar and an intact thigh.

I would be a good candidate to have the off pump method (it can’t be used in all cases). I said I had read about that on line and understood it was his thing. He smiled knowingly and said “Yes, it’s my thing.”

That was that. The NHS pledge to have carried out the operation within 18 weeks of referral. It was 5 weeks since I had been referred to Southampton so my op would be within the next 13 weeks. I calculated this would be about the middle of October.

Boy was I surprised when on Thursday August 18th my mobile rang and a voice said ‘Hello, is that Mrs Zeus, it’s Gillian from Southampton Hospital. We’ve had a cancellation and Dr O would be free this Friday for your operation.’

Eeek – a cancellation that can only mean a death right? I mean maybe not. Am I overthinking this?

Gillian was lovely and said there really was no pressure, it was very short notice and would obviously mean my going into hospital straight away for a pre op, ready to come home this evening and then go back first thing tomorrow morning. I asked her if she’d mind waiting 5 minutes whilst I called my husband, he was a big part of this after all. Driver at the very least!

I never call my husband during the day but went straight for his personal mobile and when he picked up said ‘Don’t worry – nothing’s happened but…’ and explained this one time offer. He very calmly said ‘Well what do you think?’

What did I think? Well I was just on my way to meet a good friend, Katy, for a couple of glasses of Prosecco at Southsea castle. Earlier that morning I’d said I’d cover at Avalon all day Friday (tomorrow) where I worked, I was feeding my friends cats that weekend while she was at a festival and my pyjamas weren’t ready.

Pyjamas. Well, if a fashionista has to go into hospital for a hi-octane heart by pass operation completely out of the blue, said fashionista is gonna need some lo brow frivolities to take her mind off it. The hospital leaflet said bring pyjamas that fasten down the front as you won’t be able to lift your arms above your head at first. I hit the main ports of call for such an emergency: on line; Top Shop; H&M; Debenhams. Pretty much anything cool included a t-shirty top which had to be pulled on over the head. I don’t like to use the expression when going into hospital for a relatively serious operation ‘wouldn’t be seen dead in’ but that kind of summed up everything else available.

I decided I could make some – I’d buy a pattern and say it with the fabric! So I had selected my pyjama style, scoured the materials on offer locally and had decided on some purple leopard print velour with skull buttons from Amazon. De nerr! Only thing was, I hadn’t made them yet. I could get Bassalot to drop me off at H&M on the way to hospital. Hopefully they’d have in an autumny selection of nightwear that I could probably force myself to rock…

…all weighed up against the very serious point that I needed my heart fixing. ‘Let’s not do it’ he said ‘It’s too soon’. What a love, he knows me so well! I phoned Gillian back (not mentioning the prosecco and pyjamas although I’m sure she’d have appreciated the story!) left the house and had the most lovely afternoon at the castle. Albeit feeling that I was living in one half of a very alternate reality.

This alternate reality continued until the actual operation on 6th October. It was such a huge responsibilty somehow to have turned down a date that would have shaped very differently those next few weeks. I enjoyed my Prosecco at the castle. Bassalot and I went on the newly re-opened by Wayne Sleep Hayling ferry for a scorchio day at the seaside. We went to Victorious festival on Southsea seafront. I met various friends for final beers before the op and then, when I’d met them all once, I kind of met them all again as I was still waiting. I got to see the Nik Cave film ‘One More Time With Feeling’ which when I was offered tickets for, was sure I wouldn’t be able to attend, as I’d be in for repairs.

One afternoon Nikki and I were pencilled in for a couple of pints and she texted to say her Dad was in QA as he had broken his neck. I couldn’t see any way this was going to end well and really all they could do was make him comfortable. He was a strong bugger though and held on for two weeks which was both a time to say goodbye but also a nightmare of realisation that daddy’s going. He died on 31st August.

I ate a lot of iron. And I liked it. Much fish in tins, mackerel, pilchards, sardines. Mostly on it’s own. I’m not a real foodie so didn’t get into phat recipes including feta and salads and pulses. Nor did I really bother with small time iron vehicles like spinach and brocolli. Just went for the big daddies containing the most iron per grammage and ate them. I did drink a lot of fruit juice and pretty much cut out tea as apparently this inhibits the absorption of iron by the body. And steaks, boy we had some good steaks. By op day I was iron woman tastic!

I also had the chance to get chez Lucy and Bassalot ready for my 6 week convalescence too. We did a dump run, I cleaned the kitchen and bathroom to full sparkle, every skull in the house was polished to perfection, I put the garden furniture in the shed, gave the fish a thorough cleaning, the bed a thorough airing.

THE phonecall came on Tuesday 27th September. I had immense butterflies that day and had said to Bassalot in the morning, “I’m sure it won’t happen today but I’ve really got butterflies in my stomach.”

I was walking to work and Alex phoned me from the Spire. The Spire was a private hospital in Southampton and sometimes the NHS used their facilities. Read that as beds, when the hospital was full. They’d already asked if I’d mind being done at the Spire, which I didn’t at all, and they had an appointment for next week, Thursday 6th October. I took it right there and then. I couldn’t actually have been more ready than at that point. I pulled over on the pavement and phoned Bassalot, then carried on to work.

Next Chapter #8 Pink Sunshine coming at ya Monday 7th October – keep em peeled!

Chapter #8 pink sunshine – fuzzbox – 1986

heart surgery

Shit had got real as they say somewhere. It was a week and 2 days until the operation. This still meant a certain amount of getting on with it as normal, interspersed with FUCK it’s happening. I had practical medical things to do like re-order my prescriptions so I had enough to take with me into hospital. Stop taking aspirin 7 days before the operation. Start bathing in Hibi Scrub 5 days before the operation.

Practical me things to do as well. 6 of my friends had birthdays. Some admittedly I missed which I put down to being busy / pre-occupied but figured I could sort at least 3 of them out pre op. Pay my monthly share of our living expenses into the bank, show Bassalot where our life insurance papers were (well, there were no guarantees), paint the kitchen wall behind the bin (? – strange things start becoming important), and fulfilling social engagements.

The hardest people to see before my operation were Mum and Dad. I’ve never really been a high maintenance child. My Mum said recently I pretty much born-ed myself and have been getting on with it ever since. Faced with an illness I just wanted to carry on as normally as possible and I am rubbish at being looked after or even being cared about. I won’t forget my Dads face of worry on Skype calls and because I’ve always been very self contained and independent, I didn’t really know how to handle it. My parents love me so much I couldn’t imagine what this must be like for them. With B I can openly talk about death and quantum possibilities whereas I found it incredibly difficult to talk to Mum and Dad and wish I could have been more sympathetic to their fears.

I’d obviously let them know that the operation was happening but they floored me by saying they’d like to come down and see me before.

Of course they would. I would need to see my offspring before they were cut open, it was so obvious but I really hadn’t seen it coming.

Also, Bassalot’s Mum and partner were in town and we’d kind of thought we might pop round there too. With work and socials and festivals, the best day for everyone was Sunday so I thought we’ll do it all in one hit. Go out for lunch somewhere with everyone and have a lovely afternoon. Next thing I know is Bassalot’s niece will be at his Mums that weekend so will come along and my brother and new girlfriend will come down from London! I felt slightly sick – I was kind of wanting to shut myself away by then and breathe calmly into a small paper bag. But now some kind of social event was happening, weirdly in my honour, but it wasn’t a birthday where I could be gregarious / drunk / centre of attention. Something good was happening for me (I’d been waiting for this date for 3 months and it was going to make me better). But that something was also this brutal carving up of my body where ultimately a guy was gonna saw through my breast bone and lift my still beating heart out of my chest. Maybe I’d watched too many episodes of Game of Thrones but that really was the reality going on in my head. But everyone wanted to be there because they cared and that was amazing. Or because they felt they should see me before I went in case I didn’t make it, who knows.

We got through it. Mum and Dad were amazing considering it must be awful if your child is poorly and needs a fairly invasive operation to sort it out. Dad said he’d started googling the procedure but had pulled out as it got more graphic. I rarely see my brother and he seemed really happy and tactile with his new squeeze. I liked her a lot and think he’s done alright – he certainly generally picks em more high maintenance than that. Just before they went home I didn’t really have any words. I’m not sure there were any really.

Hibi Scrub.

Hibi Scrub is bright pink and an anti microbial wash for use before an operation. The first use needed to be Saturday but I’d been at work all day and then went straight to the Southsea festival so did a wash when I got back about 11.30pm. I’d been told to use it sparingly. It had to last for five body washes and one hair wash and should be applied on disposable flannels. I’d got a cheap towel from tesco and cut it into squares – I was on this! It was kind of ok (in the most non luxurious bath experience there ever was). I sat in a puddle of bath water and did the instructions which was circular washing motions, all over the body, top to toe, paying particular attention to where the operation was happening. The whole thing was pretty cold, clinical and a stark reminder that something was up but I did feel particularly squeaky clean afterwards.

I did the same on Sunday night but used a bit more Hibi – aware that it had to go a long way but still.

Monday morning I was booked into another pre op (as my last one had apparently expired) to give swabs and a blood test. As I was now booked into the Spire hospital, I had to go to Perform, the private hospital clinic also in Southampton. Well. We got in and were immediately offered a proper barrista coffee in reception then bustled along by a lovely nurse who handed me various cotton buds to swab various nooks and crannies myself. The NHS nurses do it for you. She explains the colours of the nurses uniforms at the Spire, I think the darker the blue, the more senior the nurse. She asks if I have any Hibi Scrub. I say yes and that I have been using it since Saturday. She says, I bet you haven’t got enough though have you and presents me with a whacking great bottle 4 times the size of my original. I have a brief moment of thinking, I don’t need that much and who’s paying for this anyway, but gratefully take the bottle. The instructions actually say use as a shower wash or add liberally to bathwater as a bubble bath. Other than that the label and ingredients are exactly the same. However, in private healthcare you can splash it around wantonly and bathe luxuriously whereas on the NHS you have to kind of stand like a convict making the most of every anti microbial molecule as you rub it on your naked body.

The nurse also mentioned that on women, the breastbone when it first meshes back together, tends to stick up a bit, which doesn’t happen with guys. This would go down over the three month healing process and she wasn’t sure why it happened. I was glad she’d mentioned that as no one else had and boy was she right.

That night I bathed in luxury in Hibi Scrub heaven. If I ever have to have another operation involving Hibi scrub on the NHS I would certainly purchase top up supplies – not the most important thing in life but the little things do make a difference.

Monday afternoon I worked in Dress Code and set up a window to last the duration where funky alternative items could be swapped over for other ones quite easily until I returned. Pats came in, my favourite ab fab buddy and we had a bit of a laugh. She forgot her phone so her other half came in to pick it up and his little eyes were far more full of terror for me.

I went home and had a final steak / iron rich dinner.

Tuesday I did my few hours at the ebay emporium and said goodbyes to the guys in Pegasus. The owner of the shop next door (who only knows me as Oxford) was kind of trying to spark up a conversation but to be honest I was all out. I had told a lot of people but sometimes I just didn’t have the energy to go through the whole conversation again. It was actually nice to meet people who didn’t know and you could just have a normal conversation with them. He asked what I was up to and all I could say was ‘prepping’. No other explanation. I could tell he thought this was a bit lame but after the operation I could probably be more upbeat about the whole thing.

That afternoon, I was going into town to meet Nikki after work at about 3.30. I’d asked what her Dads favourite drink had been and we’d sup one of those in his honour. She’d said good lord no, it was vodka and red wine but that he’d also been partial to a pint of Guinness. Well that’s full of iron surely and seemed like a more plausible pre operation day tipple so we set off to Portsmouth’s Irish bar Shenanigans – well, might as well be stylish about these things. It was a bloody good pint of Guinness if I’m honest. Not something I generally quaff but when my brother lived in Dublin for a spell we’d visited and supped good fresh fruity Guinness and Portsmouth’s version was pretty up there. We then headed to Albert Road for a final half of Amstel. We’d just arrived when Nikki’s other half caught up with us – he always liked to join in a drinking social and was quite mortified when I said right, I’m off, I’ve got an operation tomorrow. He seemed to think he’d be in the pub all night if it was him, which did seem like a good alternative but I was heading home for Bassalot love, eggs, bacon and beans and my last night at home for a while.

Gulp.

Join me in hospital next week – well metaphorically speaking, for chapter #9 Wait For the Blackout… see you here at ten past six on Monday  14th October xx

Chapter #9 wait for the blackout – the damned – 1982

heart surgery

So it turned out there was no way Pussy Deluxe was gonna fit in my over-7- nights bag. All you had to take were some toiletries, pyjamas (tick), the clothes you turned up in (as you could go home in these too) and maybe a change of do up down the front top, some slippers and a dressing gown. My dressing gown was called / emblazened with the words Pussy Deluxe and had been a loyal part of my life for the last 15 years.

She was a purchase from Berlin. Bassalot’s mothers side of his family were originally Polish and had, by some weird freaky change of borders become German. Bassalot himself had been born in an army field camp in Germany and his maternal grandmother still lived there in Celle. She was quite elderly and we were visiting her, with Bassalot’s Mum for 3 nights then moi and Bassalot were heading off on our own for a few nights in Berlin. Great city. A flurry of history and architecture, goth bars and burritos, the beautiful Tiergarten in autumn, subway travel and, of course, SHOPPING!!

We do love a bit of alternative clothes shopping in other countries and even with a limited internet back in heady 2009, it was possible to ascertain where the cool shopping areas were gonna be. On one of these streets we found Pussy Deluxe. In amongst the clothes for sale by the kg and all out alternative goth emporiums there was a small independent shop. Hanging in one corner was the plushest dressing gown you have ever seen. In bright red and covered in black cartoon cats with oversized heads and eyes to emphasise cuteness and the words Pussy Deluxe emblazened in white all over the fabric. It was pretty much full length on me (not difficult as I’m not tall) and I think I remember it being 39 euros. Well, unusually for me as normally I wouldn’t be able to decide and might have spent the rest of our stay trying to find the same shop again so I could actually buy it, I decided there and then to make the purchase. The shop assistant spoke perfect English, as is often the way in Europe. It turned out that not only was it a fabulous dressing gown, but it also came in a red plasticised bag with the same pussy deluxe logo on it and the words ‘I have the right to bath in luxury’ – fantastic!

We left the store, 39 euros lighter and B galantly swinging Pussy over his shoulder, billboarding throught the streets of Berlin that he had ‘ the right to bathe in luxury’. Love him.

Pussy has served me well over the years. I had considered getting a less loud dressing gown for hospital (it was in danger of clashing with the purple velour leopard print pyjamas after all) but had decided the extra expense of a new dressing gown wasn’t on the cards. Now, however, she wouldn’t fit in the overnight bag.

I’d just have to upgrade to the skull suitcase. I hadn’t wanted to frighten any old ladies in hospital but sometimes, fashion just forces ones hand. My bag was packed, a final brunch of scrambled egg and bacon and the sun was gloriously shining. What a surreal day to be going into hospital for a heart bypass operation.

We arrived at The Spire.

Private healthcare.

A serene water feature paddled to the left of the front doors that automatically opened for us to go inside. The front desk was all very business like. I was given a form for registration and Bassalot kindly furnished his credit card details. Although I was funded by the NHS there were all sorts of sundries which could be requested the first being “Would you like a daily paper in the morning Mrs Prowse?” I’ll be honest I’d be fine with my Elle and Vogue.

We were taken upstairs to Ward 1 and I kid you not, it was a lovely little room. Apart from the obvious hospital style bed and understated emergency oxygen canister and a few other peripherals around the head end, it would have been a perfectly nice B&B for a night’s stay. The en suite bathroom also was decidedly not medical, the sink was quite low and there was some sort of biomedical waste bin but everything else was perfectly normal and there was even a complimentary shower cap, shower gel and shampoo. Marvellous.

Various nurses came in and introduced themselves. One with a great Transylvanian accent enquiring as to how I was with ‘the bloodz’. She took a few samples. It turned out I was fine with the bloodz and am O+. I had to do a pregnancy test and came running out of the bathroom saying ‘It’s a boy!’ but Bassalot went a bit pale at this so I calmed the fuck down.

It was a weird headspace. B was keen for me to unpack and settle in which I guess made sense. I was more perched on the side of the bed in limbo between settling in and waving B goodbye. I’d just stepped out of my life and the glorious sunshine outside into what was basically a complete unknown. There was a gadget on the bed with three buttons – the overhead light, nurse and (as far as we could make out) barrista! I gave in my supper order, pretty impressive and I went for Scottish salmon and a Crème brulee (I kid u not) for pudding. B had brought a pack lunch with him which soon got wolfed down and we settled into a bit of TV and snuggles whilst we waited for the consultants (anesthetist and surgeon) to come round at the end of the day.

My anaesthetist was tall and grey and very doctor looking. He had few words and sat in with us saying it would be an old fashioned anaesthetic. Not knowing, I had to enquire as to what that was. Two large sleeping tablets and a shot of morphine in the butt. No kidding, that sounded pretty old fashioned. I was up second in the morning so this would be brought round about 9.30am to my room. I would be left for about an hour for the drugs to take effect at which point I would be sleepy but rousable. There wasn’t much to chat about after that, few allergies to cosmetics, hadn’t had a problem with general anaesthetics before so all looked fairly straightforward.

Bassalot went home. I can’t imagine how difficult that must have been for him. He does look after me real good (when I let him) and he just had to hand me over to admittedly professionals but who nonetheless were gonna drug me and cut me open. We’d taken a selfie of us both before he left. I love that picture.

I waited for Dr O to come by, it seemed to be getting quite late. I was kind of thinking I’d rather he just went home and got an early night. Surely he had a big day tomorrow. I was up second and I would think there was at least another cardiac operation after me. I guess I can pull off mental working days but I’m not normally grafting arteries onto people’s hearts.

He turned up though and was very re-assuring, asked how I was doing, said he’d try his best for a good result and have me back on my bike in no time – he remembered! I had to sign the consent form for which the reason for the operation had been filled in already ‘improvements in quality and quantity of life’ – sign me up! There was a 1% chance of death or stroke and a blood transfusion was a possibility if required. He said he would phone Bassalot as soon as the procedure was done and he was welcome to visit whether or not I was conscious yet.

I embarked on my penultimate Hibi Scrub. There was no bath here but with my fulsome bottle I could lavish it on and by Hibi #5 was a pink squeaky clean iron laden body of antimicrobial goodness. I popped into my purple velour jim jams for the first time and looked in the mirror from the white hospital bed. Rod Stewart looked back at me. Not the exact persona I had in mind but he was pretty cool in the Small Faces right?

I texted B. Told him I loved him with all my achey brakey heart and relayed my Rod Stewart concerns. I got a text back by return of satellite. We had texted each other at exactly the same time. He then sent me the selfie we’d taken and assured me Rod Stewart was the coolest. I said he should probably be drinking tequila about now. He sent me a picture of a bottle and shot of tequila.

Breakfast at The Spire was served at 7.30am but I was a definite Nil By Mouth that morning. The nurses had been very chillaxed about it all the night before and said they’d be in to wake me about 8.30, I’d need to have one final Hibi Scrub but didn’t need to wash my hair in it and the drugs would start at 9.30am. Fairly understandably I’d woken up much before that. Got it on with the Hibi Scrub, decided I’d be asleep for a while so might as well have good hair and gave it a wash and condition with the complimentary shampoo and my own blonding conditioner. Well, no point letting your standards slip. I was once again, scrubbed and pink and irony and enrobed in Pussy Deluxe plus my new £1 small creature slippers. Honestly there were so many pairs of eyes on me at that point I was getting a little freaked out. B had texted while I was in the shower. I described my Pussy deluxedom and he replied that I had the right to be hospitalized in luxury – awwww.

Nurse Celeste knocked and serenely swept into the room. She seemed genuinely surprised that I was up and ready reclining on the bed looking more as if I was waiting for a massage than a heart operation. She said everything was on track. The first patient had gone down fine so I was next and she would be back in an hour with my meds and all I had to do was have my hospital robe on.

There was plenty of social media that morning to take my mind off things. Pats said she loved me but not in a gay way. The singer from Shooting Fish thought I’d rock the theatre. I’d always hit the drums so hard we’d joked I was stadium ready so she could’ve been right. And an out of the blue message from another kick ass girl drummer (I just put myself in that category too!). She is now gonna be drumming for Shooting Fish saying she’ll be keeping my throne warm for when I’m feeling better and ready to smash the shit out of my kit again! If you’ve watched the film Spinal Tap, you’ll know that it’s always the drummer who spontaneously combusts or is likely to need an organ transplant at an inopportune moment – myself no exception. Anyway, it was a really thoughtful message and I fessed up that I was in fact waiting to be fixed right there and then and the morphine was on its way any moment. She thought her timing was ridiculous, message wise, but badoom tsk! her timing had been perfect, like any drummer (!) and had made me smile.

9.45 Celeste came back. The two large sleeping tablets were in fact one small blue tablet and the morphine was a good old-fashioned shot in the arse. She left my gown undone at the back saying she’d seen how they manhandled bodies in the operating theatre trying to undo them at the back so probably best not to bother. I didn’t think this through too hard. Although it has struck me since that on the now three occasions that I’ve had surgery, I have always woken up with bruised elbows. This makes more sense as I can now imagine drugged arms falling around due to gravity, whilst taking gowns off.

I texted B to say the morphine was in and the oxygen was on. He sent me a photo of his big kissing lips, Gordon, a hand puppet gorilla and tiny princess a small rag punk doll I’d left him with in my absence. He then texted to say he’d accidentally sent that photo to my dad too. Even better!

True to the instructions I next awoke at 10.45ish to nurse Celeste and two guys who rocked me onto a wooden plank I think to shuffle me sideways onto a suitable trolley. We wheeled through corridors and lifts, saying a few words about tattoos. I met one of the guys again later and he said on the way to get me they’d been saying that Lucy was a really unusual name for an old lady. When they got in the room they were quite surprised that I was actually quite young. It’s weird as at 47 I feel quite old but in coronary bypass surgery terms I am, it seems, a young anomaly.

I ended up in a small room with a lovely lady bedecked from head to toe in important looking green scrubs. I mean properly covered from head to toe. Crocs on feet and hair and head all wrapped away in green. She chatted, I have no idea what about, and I could see the double doors at my feet end opened directly into the operating theatre. People came in and out of the doors and I grabbed snatches of what was going on inside but didn’t really recognise anybody. At my two previous operations I’d always been wheeled into the theatre, introduced to the staff, seen the massive alien style operating lights above the bed and gradually been talked through the drugs I was about to be given before hearing the infamous lines “This will just feel like a bottle of wine”. Here, I’d obviously been given some killer drugs already and slept, and waited.

And slept.

And waited.

And slept.

Next week find out What’s Inside a Girl, chapter #10. Same time, same place, but a special guest writer as I was obviously pretty out of it.

Chapter #10 what’s inside a girl – the cramps – 1986

heart surgery

There is someone in my life who is very important to me. I have known her for over 20 years and I love her dearly. Her name is Lucy and she rocks.

Lucy is the first one up in the morning and the last one to bed at night. She likes her music fast and loud. She embraces life with a vigour that is unmatched. One of the best things about her is that after all this time she still manages to surprise me on a regular basis.

To sum up, Lucy is the most beautiful person I know.

It was hard to watch her get weaker over the weeks leading up to the operation. It was an inspiration to watch her bravely endure all the indignities the process threw at her.

The day of the operation is still fresh in my mind. I had not slept well. I tried to keep busy waiting for the call from the surgeon. The phone rang about 3.00pm, which was earlier than I was expecting.

Thankfully it was good news.

Before the operation a nurse had told me specifically not to ask Dr O whether it was OK to visit Lucy. I presumed this meant that he had said ‘no’ in the past, and the nurse was saying ask her instead. I was surprised when Dr O asked was I able to come and see Lucy. The operation had just finished, I said I could be there in about an hour. He said this was good.

Just over an hour later I found myself stood outside the intensive care doors. After quite some time a nervous looking nurse appeared and pulled me to one side. She asked why I had come? I said Dr O had suggested it and she rolled her eyes.

The nurse kindly explained that Lucy was unconscious and would be for several more hours. She informed me of all the machines, wires, tubes and drips involved and that most people found this quite distressing. Finally she said that even though Dr O had suggested it, it really was not a very good idea.

Something happened which I don’t understand. I think it may have been the look on my face. The nurse said firmly, ‘Are you sure you are up for this?’ I said ‘Yes’.

She took me through a myriad of corridors and half curtained off beeping areas before I saw a bed. I say a bed it looked more like a tardis type machine with bustling engineers, and Lucy in the middle.

I put my bag down and trying not to trip over anything or get in anyone’s way. I stepped up to the bed.

Now I say that Lucy surprised me nearly every day. This day was no different.

There, amongst all the tech, I saw for the first time in my life, Lucy’s sleeping face. As I say she is always up before me. She goes to bed after me. She gets the most out of every waking minute. I hadn’t realised that I had never seen her expression so deeply asleep. I was overwhelmed by the thought that Lucy is the most beautiful human I have met. The nurse looked concerned and said was I OK.

Looking back afterwards I realised that the next things I said were kind of tacky. However the nurses around her all seemed to understand. I said, ‘She is beautiful and she is alive. I am delighted.’ I turned to the nurse who had let me in. She was in full sterile gear. I said, ‘I would hug you but you’re clean and I’m not.’

I let myself out of the hospital and drove home. To be honest the next 24 hours are a bit of a blur.

He’s a boss B) – pop back next week for the first few shaky steps post bypass and some hospital shenanigans. Check in to ‘Whatever Doesn’t Kill You is Gonna Leave a Scar’ (thank you Mr Manson), same time, Monday 28th October XX