Open Heart Runner: Searching for Meaning After My Heart Stopped
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About this ebook
When 40-year-old Gregory Marchand suffered a cardiac arrest at the end of an eight-kilometer road race and was without a pulse for 20 minutes, few thought he would survive. This inspiring story of hope tells how he battled through a coma, heart surgery and debilitating brain injury to search for the meaning behind his survival that doctors called miraculous. For the highly-trained athlete, weekend warrior, or anyone (runner or not) who has feared death, Gregory's meditative memoir offers insight into how nearly dying can bring new life.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Gregory Marchand has been a runner and competitive athlete all his life. Since suffering a cardiac arrest and subsequently undergoing open-heart surgery in 1998, his running has continued to be a major focus in his life but now as a source of wellness and spiritual growth rather than competition. An educator and counsellor for over 25 years, Marchand is also a prolific freelance writer, having published over 100 magazine and newspaper articles. He and his wife, Debbie, live on Vancouver Island and are newly-hatched empty nesters with three grown children.
ADVANCE REVIEWS:
"Because people are very good at forgetting what life is really about, Open Heart Runner is so important. Gregory Marchand reminds us of many things: our fragility, our capacity for love, our deep desire for meaning." - Terence Young, Governor-General's-Award-nominated poet and author of the novel After Goodlake's.
"Gregory Marchand's story is at first frightening and ultimately uplifting." - Joe Henderson, author, running coach and former chief editor of Runner's World magazine.
"Gregory Marchand takes us to a place where most of us will never be, or would choose to go. He re-enters life with rich insights that can help us all on our journey down the right road." - Rob Reid, Race Director of the Royal Victoria Marathon
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Open Heart Runner - Gregory Marchand
Open Heart Runner
searching for meaning after my heart stopped
Gregory Marchand
Smashwords Edition
Agio Publishing House, 151 Howe Street, Victoria BC Canada V8V 4K5
© 2012, Gregory Marchand. All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book. For rights information and bulk orders, please contact [email protected] or go to www.agiopublishing.com
Visit Gregory Marchand's website at www.openheartrunner.com
Open Heart Runner Cataloguing information available from Library and Archives Canada.
ISBN 978-1-897435-78-6 (trade paperback) ISBN 978-1-897435-79-3 (ebook)
Agio Publishing House is a socially-responsible company, measuring success on a triple-bottom-line basis.
Advance Reviews
"People are very good at forgetting, which is why a book like this is so important. In Open Heart Runner, Gregory Marchand reminds us of many things: our fragility, our capacity for love, our deep desire for meaning. He reminds us that we are neither wholly flesh nor wholly spirit, but a strange amalgam of the two. Open Heart Runner rends the thin veil between our quotidian lives and a realm that connects us all, and teaches us to love that well, which [we] must leave ere long."
-—Terence Young, Governor-General’s-Award-nominated poet and author of the novel After Goodlake’s
"Gregory Marchand takes us to a place most of us will never be, or would chose to go. He re-enters life with rich insights that can help us all on our journey down the right road."
—Rob Reid, Race Director of the Royal Victoria Marathon
"Gregory Marchand’s memoir centers on two equal and opposite lessons. The first is that of an endurance athlete, a longtime long-distance runner in his case, isn’t guaranteed perfect cardiac health. Medical catastrophes can visit even the very fit. Greg’s other lesson is that the human body and mind, with assists from advanced medical science, have amazing powers to rebound, even from life-threatening crises. Marchand’s story is at first frightening and ultimately uplifting."
—Joe Henderson, author, running coach and former chief editor of Runner’s World magazine
Dedication
For my parents, Pat and Lou; my sisters, Luanne, Colette and Allison; my wife, Debbie; and my children, Lucas, Raechel and Leo.
And for all those who run and walk through life with an open heart.
Prologue: TERRORS
Something’s wrong. I can feel it. I can’t tell what it is, though. I’ve felt like this before. Or something like it. I always hurt when I run a race. Especially at the end. It’s cold today and I just need to finish. But it hurts. I’m not breathing right.
Just get past it. That’s all I need to do. This little climb to the finish line is nothing. I can even pass that woman just ahead of me. That would be good. Just a few more steps.
There’s something wrong, though. My chest. My heart. I can’t feel my arms. My fingers are tingling in my gloves. I feel tired. I am tired.
It hurts. I hurt.
I’m on the ground. What’s going on? My head aches. My face hurts. I must have hit my head on something, on the gravel maybe. If I could just get up, I’d be okay.
I can’t move. All these people around me. What’s going on? I’m just tired. Let me get up. Let me move.
If you’d let me move, I’d be okay. The race is over. I’m okay.
When I was younger, starting at about eight or nine, I’d frequently wake my parents in the middle of the night crying out from a dream I was having. They’d hear me running around the house screaming. I was still asleep, or at least I was unconscious. But I was running, running away from something. My parents would chase after me trying to keep me from hurting myself and trying to calm me down enough to bring me back to reality.
Later, I wouldn’t remember any of this. I wouldn’t remember running, or screaming, or my parents chasing me. I’d only become aware of them and myself once they’d managed to slow me down, stop me from running, and give me a drink of water, the coolness of the liquid easing me back to reality as it ran down my throat.
Gradually, I’d wake up, my heart racing and sweat pouring down my face. I’d still be breathing hard, trying to understand what was going on and what I was feeling.
After I’d awakened fully, I’d start to remember the feeling that had pervaded my dream and started these night terrors. In my dream, I’d be aware of a darkness closing in on me. It was formless but large, like a pulsating blob of ink expanding around me. It would contract slightly then expand again even larger.
As I breathed, it would grow and surround me almost entirely. The more I breathed, the more it grew and the more I felt entrapped. I couldn’t get away from it, so I’d run. But the harder I ran and the harder I breathed, the larger it grew. I didn’t realize that if I just stopped running, I would breathe slower and allow the blob to fully contract and disappear.
But I was afraid. I wanted to escape it, not understanding that my only escape was to relax, to let go, to let it pass.
That same inkiness enveloped me as I lay on the ground at the end of the race surrounded by strangers pumping on my chest, breathing into my mouth, trying to push life into my lifeless body. As in my dream, I wanted to get up and run. Their hands pounding on my chest and their lips pressing against my mouth were too close. But my breath wouldn’t come and the same blob of pressure that would surround me in my dreams entrapped me now, pushing on my chest, holding me down. I needed to get up. I needed to run away.
1: RACING
Oh, be quiet,
I muttered.
The buzz of the alarm clock pierced my sleep. I reached over to the table at my bedside, turned off the alarm, and lay back on my pillow not wanting to open my eyes.
My wife, Debbie, stirred beside me. What time is it?
Her voice sounded groggy and slightly perturbed.
Eight o’clock.
Why so early? It’s Sunday.
The run.
Oh, right.
Finally, I opened my eyes. Our bedroom was still dark, the sun, like Debbie and me, not yet risen. I pulled the quilt covering our bed back over my shoulders. It was so cold in the room that my fingers began to feel numb from the few seconds my arm had been uncovered.
It’s too cold,
Debbie said.
I know. The forecast is for snow later today.
You’re not really going to run, are you?
Well, I don’t feel much like getting out of bed.
Then don’t.
I’ve already registered for the race. I might as well run it.
I’m going back to sleep.
I had no idea what lay ahead for me as I reluctantly climbed out of bed that morning. We all intellectually understand that our lives can change in an instant – that losing control of the car on a snow-covered road, eating poorly cooked food, or walking across thin ice on a frozen river can have consequences that are completely unexpected. I used to imagine what it would be like if my life suddenly altered course completely beyond my control. Now I know.
The chill shocked me as my feet touched the fir flooring of our bedroom. January can be cold in most parts of Canada, but Victoria is different. It’s not supposed to be cold here, even in the winter. But the temperature had dropped below freezing overnight, and our 85-year-old home was not coping well with the cold as the morning dawned clear but brisk. Although I’d grown up on the stark Alberta prairie where winters can be deadly, I’d become accustomed to the temperate climate of Victoria. A chilly, January morning run held little attraction for me.
At least that’s how I probably felt. I have only vague memories of January 11th, 1998. My conscious knowledge of the day has come from the reports of family and friends.
My son, Lucas, was 15 at the time, and we had planned to run the race together that morning. He and I had been running together since he was eight years old. At first I would run an easy pace to allow him to keep up. Now, he had become nothing more than the back of a flapping jersey as he consistently outran me. For the past week, he had been nursing a case of strep throat with antibiotics. I had registered him to run in the race anyway hoping he would be better by the weekend. But when I went downstairs to his room that morning to check on him and heard his laboured breathing, I knew he was still too sick to run. Today, I’m grateful he wasn’t at the end of the race to see me collapse, to see my heart stop, to see my life fade.
Do all runners feel a need to run?
According to Debbie, I considered not running that morning as well. I’d recently cut my teaching load to part time, was supplementing my income working as a freelance writer, and had completed a busy week meeting several deadlines for writing assignments. It would have been nice to relax into a Sunday morning of reading the newspaper and sipping coffee without having to drive 20 kilometres to Saanichton and then run in the below-freezing temperature for eight kilometres. But then a friend called wondering if I planned to run the race. Later, he confided that he had hoped I would talk him out of running. But we were both driven by the undeclared notion that the other truly wanted to run. We agreed to meet at the fairgrounds.
I loved running. But, like anyone who participates in an activity that takes effort, I would often have to convince myself to actually do it. I looked forward to the exhilaration of the endorphin rush from running, but I often had to remind myself of that feeling in order to get myself started. Especially on a cold, January morning.
The race started at 11:00 a.m. After a light breakfast, I set out at about 10:00. I’d run the same race in past years so the route was familiar to me. The Saanichton Fairgrounds, where the race begins and ends, is a 20-minute drive from our home. The grounds are used for several community events, most notably the Labour Day weekend fair that attracts several thousand visitors viewing everything from home preserves and prized piglets to handmade quilts and oil paintings. In January, it’s little more than a parking lot. That evening, long after the race had been completed, my brother-in-law was dispatched to pick up my car. It was in the middle of that darkened parking lot, a solitary vehicle looking abandoned by its driver.
I must have parked in the midst of several hundred other cars that morning and entered the main building to pick up my race packet. Inside, I talked to some other runners. A friend later interviewed many of those people.
One of those he interviewed, Merrell Harlow, was handing out registration packets and greeted me inside. Merrell was an avid runner, even in her fifties, and a long-time friend who worked at the school where I still teach.
Where’s Lucas?
she asked as I picked up my race packet.
When I told her that Lucas was sick, I admitted that I wasn’t feeling great myself.
Can anyone feel well in this weather?
she asked.
I must have finally braved the cold, leaving the warmth of the hall to join the more than 600 other runners outside. There I met a fellow writer and teacher, Marilyn McCrimmon. The start line was crowded as we looked for a place to stand. In the midst of the crowd, the frigid temperature wasn’t as apparent as we huddled together.
Maybe we can all run the whole race in a big crowd like this to conserve heat,
Marilyn kidded. We were still laughing about her idea and jumping up and down to stay warm when the starting gun sounded. The crowd surged forward in the kind of closely packed group that Marilyn had imagined, but soon we were separated as I ran ahead.
The next day, a local newspaper published a photograph of the start of the race. In the photo, the runners are packed together in a group of several hundred. I’m in the middle of the photo sandwiched between several runners. Many are wearing wool hats and jackets to ward off the cold. I’m wearing gloves and a dark sweatshirt. I haven’t seen them since. A doctor later told me the ambulance attendants had probably cut off the shirt in order to attach contact points to my chest as they strained to find a heartbeat. Marilyn is still next to me in the photo although I appear to be running slightly ahead of her. I didn’t know it at the time, but just in front of me are two of the doctors who would later save my life.
The Harriers 8K, as the race is called, is a hilly course. It starts from the elevated fairgrounds hall, runs down a gravel roadway, and then turns onto a paved country road. The route meanders past farms and suburban homes and doubles back on itself twice so that competitors can see other runners both ahead and behind at different times. After completing registrations, Merrell walked out along the route to cheer on the runners at the halfway point where the route circles past the fairgrounds again. She saw me run by and thought that the race looked like a struggle for me. She assumed that I hadn’t run in a while, and was just starting to train again.
In fact, I had been training hard for the race. I was looking forward to this year’s nine-race series because of my increased training and remember feeling frustrated that my extra work hadn’t been paying dividends. I was running more miles, but my body wasn’t responding.
One memory I have of the race is seeing a frozen duck pond as we ran by one of the many small farms along the race route. The cold air would have been causing me to breathe hard. I like to start out strong