I Thought I Was Just Tired
A poem about surviving heart failure, leaving the kitchen, and discovering a second life as a writer.

I was forty-four years old
and I thought
I was just tired.
I was in heart failure.
They opened my chest.
Triple bypass.
I did not know
until they told me
how close it was.
Four years later
I went back to the kitchen
as the executive chef
running the line
because I did not know
how to be
anyone else.
But I came back different.
Pump brain, they call it.
The surgery takes something
from your cognition
and it does not give it back.
My voice was damaged
from the intubation.
It was weaker.
I was weaker.
I kept running the kitchen
even when my body
was no longer able
to do it easily.
A kitchen line
runs on adrenaline.
I want to be clear about that.
There is nothing
in civilian life
that feels the same
as a full service
when every station is moving
and you are the person
coordinating all of it
with your voice
and your hands.
I loved it.
When it was good
I loved it completely.
I stayed
until I couldn't.
Not a dramatic exit.
Just a slow
honest recognition
of what my body
could
and could not do.
My sons were there.
They are both chefs now.
They worked beside me
and they helped me out.
Not in the way
you help someone
who is broken.
In the way
you help someone
you respect enough
to tell the truth to.
I watch them now
and I feel two things
at the same time.
Pride.
Which is simple.
They are good.
They are better than good.
They move through a kitchen
the way I moved through a kitchen
when I was at my best.
I see it.
I know exactly
what it feels like.
That
is the jealousy.
Not hateful.
Not bitter.
Just honest.
I know what they’re feeling.
I cannot feel it anymore.
I miss it.
I left the kitchen
and I taught myself
to write
to publish
to edit
to design.
I did this while recovering
from a body
that had already asked
more than it should have.
I did it because
I needed another life.
But here is the part
I did not expect.
I love it.
Not because
I had no other choice.
Because it turns out
I truly enjoy
doing this work.
I am lucky.
I know I am lucky.
Some people
lose the thing they love
and that is the whole story.
I lost the kitchen
and discovered
that I also love writing.
I hope I can do it
as well as I did the kitchen.
I do not know yet.
I am working on it.
That
is enough
for now.
About the Creator
Leslie L. Stevens Writer | Marfa, Texas
Her work blends personal essays, folklore-tinged storytelling, and emotional realism, often rooted in the West Texas landscape. She publishes fiction and nonfiction across Medium, Amazon KDP, and reader-driven platforms.



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