What I Learned From Fake Dying ~ 2015 Reprise
This post from waaaay back has been requested twice in the past few months and I keep forgetting. So Sorry.
“My fake plants died because I did not pretend to water them.”
I could have died last Thursday. You laugh. But I could have.
It was a distinct possibility. I was going to be put under general anesthesia. As dead as you can be without actually ceasing to live. The thought of my demise was planted via the doom-delivery-system otherwise known as the mountains and mountains of legalese the hospital, doctors, parking attendant, and cafeteria lady gave me to sign. This charming pre-op ritual made it clear that I was to hold absolutely no one responsible for my death—should I find myself actually dead while faking it.
Doctors make you do that just before they put you under.
“Do you have a pen?” The person in charge of responsibility-dodging asked with a straight face. “I’m wearing a paper gown, what do you think?”
Culpability. It’s a thing.
I could have choked on my pastrami sandwich at lunch today but the deli didn’t drown me in documents before I took my first bite.
Sheesh.
I get it. It’s their duty to remind you. That’s the thing about being injected with drugs that render you ‘fake’ dead so they can cut you wide open—they up your odds of becoming ‘real’ dead.
Anyhow, it got me thinking about dying.
About my “exit strategy”, which is a term my deceased friend uses to refer to death. “Everyone has one, you have several opportunities actually” she reminds me all the time. Apparently, it presents itself in the form of an illness, a car accident, an egg salad at the beach, or airport sushi.
Everyone keeps telling you that shit’ll kill ya.
So even though I didn’t have a reasonable reason to feel as if my days were numbered—I just did.
I lived as if I was going to die.
Imminently. Like Thursday.
I’m not gonna lie, my fake death made me a little fake sad. Mostly it made me crave bad food (because hey, why not)—and wish I’d had time to get my hair straightened (good looking corpse rule #2. Rule #1 – Mani-pedi.)
Oh, and it made me pay attention to my life. I was suddenly ‘all in’. No half-assing.
Everything I did I felt like I was doing for the last time, so I savored it. Kissing my dog was delicious. Ice cream tasted better if you can imagine that.
Dislikes became definitive: I can’t stand cheap vanilla candles or cologne on men in elevators.
I noticed things I tend to overlook: The sound of the rain as it hits the pavers in our courtyard.
And have you ever noticed that lots of people hold hands? Have you? I never did. And not just parents and kids. Couples of all types. Young, old, fat, skinny, young and skinny, old and fat, didn’t matter. hands were being held. I think that’s sweet.
Did you know that studies have found that holding hands is good for your heart? I looked it up.
I took my time. I dawdled. I went to the movies in the middle of the day and ate a hot dog—with extra mustard. I walked my neighborhood without my earbuds. I noticed my feet and my legs and how they move me through life and instead of run/walking everywhere like I normally do, I wandered. I looked more closely at the street art. I splashed in puddles. I said hello to strangers which isn’t new, I just noticed how often I do that.
I wondered if my fake death was making me lazy? Oh, look, a fake problem.
You wanna know what I didn’t do?
Hold on tight to anything.
Worry (why waste my time?)
Diet.
Walk on eggshells.
Work more.
Forget to say I LOVE YOU.
Saturday I came down with the flu and just like that it felt as if the rumors of my death would pan out to be true.
My surgery was canceled, and as suddenly as it had appeared, the energy of my “exit strategy” passed.
Again, just like that.
It has left my consciousness so completely that as hard as I try I can’t even conjure the feeling.
I know that when I do get this surgery the thought of dying won’t even occur to me.
I had my fake dry run and the take-away was something real.
Appreciating my life.
Carry on,
xox
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