Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.06.2010, Síða 8

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.06.2010, Síða 8
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca 8 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1 June 2010 Owner/Dealer rObert FriDFinnsOn www.mymidtownford.com 100-1717 waverley street waverley autO Mall winnipeg, ManitOba r3t 6a9 1-800-665-1632 204-284-7650 Ed. Note: Ray Johnson just received an award for his vol- unteer work. He’s the living example of no excuse is good enough to not give back to your community. With the coopera- tion of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Manitoba, here is his inspiring story. Heart disease impacts people of all ages and spans across genera- tions. Nobody knows that bet- ter than Ray Johnson and his three-year-old grandson, Atli, of Portage la Prairie. Both Ray and Atli have had to fight their own personal battles with cardiovascular disease. Ray was just 42 when he first began experiencing heart problems. “We were returning from a weekend with family when I started having this dull ache in my chest. I got to the point where I couldn’t drive and had to stand at the back of the mo- tor home, hanging on to one of the bunks,” he said. Ray went immediately to the Portage hospital where he underwent a series of enzyme tests and was sent to Winnipeg for an angiogram. Soon after he was told he had suffered a minor heart attack. “When I asked the doctor why I was having a heart at- tack at 42, his terse response was, ‘you picked the wrong parents.’” This was upsetting news for Ray and his wife Norma, who knew heart disease was preva- lent in the Johnson family; Ray had three brothers with heart problems and his father died of a blood clot at just 67. “Back in the ’50s when you had hardening of the ar- teries, you had hardening of the arteries and nothing could be done about it. I was given a better chance than my father had,” he said. Ray was put on a beta blocker and Aspirin® and told by his doctor to start walking and work his way up to run- ning two miles a day. He was able to keep his heart trouble at bay mainly with a controlled diet and daily exercise. “At that time, there was no talk of blood pressure control or cholesterol assessment. I just walked and ran everyday in all kinds of weather and got the two mile per day rou- tine by spring. I had regular angiograms done, but by the third year of this I remember the assistant remarked, ‘well that was a waste of time,’ and I guess that meant mission ac- complished!” It wasn’t until ten years later, during that stressful time at the end of the 1992 school year when Ray, a principal and math teacher, experienced the return of that same dull ache. He had further tests but wasn’t diagnosed with unstable angina until after his retirement in 1996. It was in December of that year when Ray was treated with an angioplasty with stent procedure, which opened up the blockage and allowed him to be free of pain for some time. Another ten years later, in 2005, Ray was keeping busy in his retirement working long days driving truck for the po- tato harvest, hunting and cut- ting wood when, as he put it, ‘Madam Angina’ came back to visit. He went for an angio- gram at St. Boniface Hospital in Winnipeg and was told he had three clogged arteries and would require triple bypass surgery. This news was dif- ficult to take, as this was sup- posed to be a joyous time; the Johnson’s only daughter Rael- ene Grimolfson was due for the arrival of their first grandchild. “I had been down the road with dad and his heart in the past and it was always a bit nerve wracking,” said Rael- ene. “But I knew my dad was in good hands; my only disap- pointment was that because I was quite pregnant at the time, I couldn’t be as much help as usual with driving and visit- ing,” she said. Ray was placed on a wait- ing list for bypass surgery, but was told he needed to stay in Winnipeg, so they stayed at a friend’s house that night. It was at around 2 a.m. when Ray began experiencing chest pains that wouldn’t go away. He woke up Norma and told her that they needed to go back to the hospital. “That’s when things really went crazy,” said Ray. “We left the house, locked the door, and went to the car but the battery was stone dead. We hadn’t tak- en a key for the house we were staying at so I dialed 911 on my cell phone and told the dis- patcher of the situation – chest pains, locked out, dead car and 20 below. Her response was, ‘help is on the way.’” Ray said he could hear the sirens the minute he closed his cell phone. “That was the best thing that could have happened to us, actually, because I got cared for right away by the ambulance paramedics and the hospital was ready for me when I arrived.” No longer required to be on a waiting list, Johnson was treated immediately with triple bypass surgery. Ray’s daughter Raelene and her husband Dar- ren drove in to Winnipeg from Portage to visit. “I remember going up to see him after his surgery and we joked about how we are go- ing to be in the hospital at the same time, and as it turned out, we were!” said Raelene, who soon went into labour and was admitted to a bed just one floor up from her father. “It was kind of cute,” laughed Raelene. “The day Atli was born, my dad was being discharged, and my mom was going up and down the elevator trying to be with us both.” Raelene, 37, had a normal and healthy pregnancy, and it wasn’t until she was in labour that staff picked up an irregu- larity in Atli’s heart rate. Raelene was sent for an emergency c-section and what started out as a joyous occasion quickly turned into a nightmare for the new parents when they learned that their newborn son Atli was diagnosed with chaot- ic atrial tachycardia (irregular heart beat). Atli was immediately treated with an electric paddle to restart or ‘flip’ his heart to a normal rhythm. Doctors stopped and started his heart several times. “It can be painful, so they decided they wouldn’t do that to him again until he was a few ray Johnson: The no excuse man PhoTos: douG lITTle PhoToGraPhy Ray Johnson Art Investment Offer! · Paper lithograph (Mill Pond Press) 1979 · limited edition Signed and numbered #341 of 950 · Simple black frame (35 in. wide x 27 in. high in frame) · $1500 appraised FoR FuRTHeR InFoRMATIon, oR To MAke oFFeR To PuRCHASe, PleASe ConTACT SelleR AT patersonja@gmail.com Puffins by Roger Tory Peterson       Scandinavian Hjemkomst Festival June 25-27, 2010 Hjemkomst Center, 202 1st Ave N, Moorhead, MN 701-478-9150; www.NordicCultureClubs.org

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