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Joyce Hoffman The Tales of a Patient |
My grandmother, on my father's side, was born in Russia, circa 1884. She escaped to Paris for 6 months to avoid the Russian pogroms, primarily aimed against the Jews, in the late 1800s. And then, when she found a ship going anywhere but Russia, she settled in Canada. If you asked my grandmother about her nationality, given that there were a few choices, she always said that she was French because she learned the language or, at least, enough to get by.
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Sarah Bernhardt |
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Everybody said I was brave and/or out of my mind to have an operation that would correct my drop foot. And that got me thinking: I was brave, but was I out of my mind?
I used to be a runner, and like most runners everywhere, I dreamed of running the Marathon. The drop foot surgery, if successful, would allow me to rotate the foot and ankle, where now, my foot always hangs there, like it's lost the fight. It might take me a year or more and a tad of money for a trainer, but the Marathon is on my bucket list, and so are square and round dancing and taking lengthy strolls. So "out of my mind"? I don't think so.
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A little more than 24 hours to go and I'll be on the operating room table, knocked out, surrounded by the surgeon, the residents, the anesthesiologist, the nurses. I am going into surgery calm, collected. I'll keep a diary to share with you as soon as I can.
But even now, once again, I ask myself about the surgery, "Are you out of your mind?"
And the answer to myself doesn't surprise me because it's always the same: "I don't think so."
The time is ticking down, seemingly fast.
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