Quote:
Originally Posted by 4-2-7
I must say merrylander now you have me thinking of my Dad. He retired young at 56 and moved to the country. Around 58 he found out he had a bit of a heart issue so he decided to get healthy. One morning he went to the small towns gym and was using the stationary bike.
He had a massive heart attack that day and left us.
So tell your son this is a case where more is not better and slow recovery would be the goal.
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My old man crapped out from a heart attack at 45 and my mother did the same thing at 53. So that's an average of 49 years.
Right now I'm 66. That means I've had my 49 years plus 17 of someone elses, maybe yours.
At any rate, the way I see it, if I hit the floor like a sack of wet cement before my next keystoke, I still go out a winner.
Every tick of the clock from here on out is gravy.