
I Thought I Was “Fine”… Until I Collapsed in the Produce Aisle đ
It was a Tuesday. Hot, muggy, one of those days where your shirt sticks to your back before 9 a.m. I remember grabbing a bag of spinach, then waking up with my cheek against cold tile and the smell of bananas way too close for comfort.
The EMT said it might be dehydration. My doctor thought anxiety.
It wasnât until my third ER visit that someone finally used the words:
âYou might be dealing with Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction.â
Heart failure? Me? With a preserved what now?
I didnât get it. My ejection fraction (how well my heart pumps) was normal. So how could my heart be failing?
Spoiler: It can. And it does. More than people realize.
Especially for women. Especially for people like me, who âdonât look sick.â
What Is Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction (HFpEF)?
From Someone Whoâs Lived It â Not Studied It
Iâm not a doctor. But I am someone whoâs fought, feared, and finally (kind of) made peace with HFpEF.
Hereâs how I explain it to friends over wine (decaf now… sigh):
Your heart has one main jobâpump blood. In HFpEF, it still pumps OK, but itâs become stiff, like a balloon that doesnât fully relax between beats. That means it canât fill with enough blood. So less blood gets pushed out each time.
Imagine trying to breathe through a straw. Thatâs what walking across my living room felt like during flare-ups.
The irony? Test after test showed my ejection fraction was âgreat.â
And yetâI couldnât walk up a flight of stairs without needing to sit down and cry.
1. It Doesnât Look Like Heart Failure. But It Sure Feels Like It.
I always thought âheart failureâ meant heart attacks and defibrillators and hospital beds.
Nope.
With HFpEF, symptoms creep in like fog:
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Fatigue that feels like your soul is dragging
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Shortness of breath doing stupid things, like brushing your hair
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Swelling in your ankles that makes your shoes not fit by noon
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Racing heart when you're doing… absolutely nothing
I started thinking I was lazy. Or depressed. Or both.
It wasnât until I tracked my symptoms and showed my cardiologist actual notes (yes, Iâm that girl with a symptom spreadsheet đ« ) that we figured it out.
2. Doctors Donât Always Catch ItâYou Might Have to Push (Hard)
This one makes me furious. I saw four doctors before anyone said âHFpEF.â
One told me I was just âdeconditioned.â Another hinted it might be perimenopause.
Itâs especially common for women to get brushed off. Our symptoms show up differently.
And if youâre not old, male, and gasping on a treadmill, they might not see it.
But hereâs what helped:
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Keeping a diary of my symptoms (fatigue, swelling, sleep disturbances)
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Tracking blood pressure (mine was sneakily high at night)
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Not accepting âyour tests are normalâ as a full answer
I also got a natriuretic peptide test and echocardiogram with diastolic functionâthese finally gave me the diagnosis.
3. Low-Sodium Diets Actually Made a Difference (After I Stopped Cheating) đ§
I used to roll my eyes when doctors said to cut salt. Like, coolâjust remove all joy from food, got it.
But I got desperate. The swelling in my legs got so bad I couldnât zip my boots.
So I finally tried:
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Cooking 90% of my meals at home
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Ditching deli meats (đ goodbye, turkey sandwiches)
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Using lemon, herbs, and smoked paprika like a damn magician
Within 10 days, I saw the swelling vanish. And get thisâmy Fitbit stopped showing weird overnight spikes in heart rate.
Now Iâm not saying food fixed everything. But when I clean up my diet? My heart behaves.
4. Exercise Helped… But Only After I Got Out of My Own Way
âJust move more!â
Thatâs what they told me. But walking around the block felt like a marathon at first.
Eventually, I found a rhythm. It looked nothing like my old workouts. And that was hard. Ego-wise.
Hereâs what actually worked:
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Gentle yoga (I cried the first time I managed childâs pose without dizziness)
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3-minute walks around the house, spaced out every hour
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Resistance bands while sitting (bonus: theyâre great for Netflix marathons)
Now I can do 20 minutes on the recumbent bike without gasping.
Still, I have flare days. And thatâs OK. I donât push through anymoreâI pace myself. Literally.
5. Medications Are Trial-and-Error Hell… But Worth It
I went through what felt like a pharmacy aisle of pills.
Some made me pee every 15 minutes (looking at you, diuretics).
Some gave me crushing headaches. One even made my vision blurry for a week.
Eventually, my doc and I found a combo that didnât suck:
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Low-dose beta blockers
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ARNI meds (this was a game-changer)
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A touch of spironolactone
But honestly? The best medicine was a cardiologist who listened.
If yours doesnât take your symptoms seriously, fire them. Seriously. Youâre allowed.
6. Stress Is My Sneaky Trigger (and Itâs Hard to Avoid) đ€
I didnât want to believe it. But every time I had a stressful weekâlike when my boss dumped three deadlines on me or I fought with my sisterâBOOM:
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Fatigue
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Breathlessness
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Chest pressure (not pain, just that freaky tight feeling)
I started tracking these flares. 8 out of 10? Linked to emotional stress.
So I started doing something I never thought Iâd do.
Meditation.
Yes, me. The girl who couldnât sit still if you paid her. I downloaded a cheesy app and forced myself to breathe for 5 minutes a day.
And it helped. Along with:
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Coloring books (no judgment)
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Saying no (a lot)
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Leaving group chats on read (sorry, not sorry)
7. Itâs Not Curable. But Itâs Manageable. And Youâre Not Alone.
Thereâs no magic pill. No surgery to fix it. And that used to wreck me.
But hereâs the thing:
Iâm not the same person I was when I fainted in that grocery store.
I get my body now. I understand its whispers before they become screams.
And more importantlyâIâm not ashamed anymore.
Not of needing rest. Not of carrying around pill bottles. Not of saying, âI have heart failure,â and letting people be confused when I donât look sick.
So… What Do I Wish Iâd Known Sooner?
If youâve just been diagnosed with Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fractionâor you suspect you might have itâhereâs what I want to DM you straight from my heart (pun intended):
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Youâre not imagining it.
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You're not lazy.
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You donât have to be perfect to feel better.
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Small changes matterâlike really matter.
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Find doctors who see you, not just your chart.
This condition is weird. It's frustrating. It's invisible.
But it's not unbeatable.
Some days I still grieve the old me. The one who could sprint for the train or stay up late without paying for it the next day.
But this version of me? Sheâs softer. Wiser. Way more in tune with what matters.
And her boots zip up now.