It wasn’t a big deal when I first noticed my ankles and feet swelling. I’m not sure if it started the middle of last week or over the weekend. It didn’t seem like a big enough deal to pay attention to at first.
But by Monday, the swelling was painful. My shoes felt as though they were about two sizes too small. It hurt to walk. I still didn’t think it was a big deal, but it was irritating enough by Wednesday to go visit a friend who’s a doctor. I just wanted him to tell me how to make the swelling go away.
My friend took a look at the swelling and pressed his thumb into part of the skin on each ankle and he timed how long it took the “pit” to go away. It was taking far longer than it should, he said, and that made it a “pitting edema.”
“Is it going to kill me?” I asked jokingly.
“Well, pitting edema is a classic sign of possible congestive heart failure,” he said. And he wasn’t joking.
For just a minute, I felt as though I was in another doctor’s office 18 months ago when a specialist told me that I had breast cancer and needed immediate surgery. For that minute, I relived what it felt like to experience the worry and loneliness I’d felt then. (I wrote about the experience of surgery this past January, on the one-year anniversary.) It felt as though someone was waving a red warning flag at me.

Arming teachers for safety likely to create gang that can’t shoot straight
Moral principle: What you do with your money is your business
Intuition sometimes tells you when someone is worth chasing
Time for anger? Dissent is good, but ask what the dissenters stand for
Chappelle is offensive and crude, but what he’s doing is important
My show isn’t very good yet, but my goal is to be a professional
Briefly: Comic perfectly captured what I wrote about this weekend
As nightmares plague my friends, I’m grateful mine have subsided
Liberal NPR, PBS? Why should tax money pay to influence culture?