>>96557806I understand having to retire because you're super sick, and I understand having a heart attack shortly afterwards, but what legitimate, fair, good faith reason could there possibly be for not communicating that yes you had a heart attack, but no you're not dead, when you know that everyone who knows anything about you on the internet is saying you died.
You don't need to unretire and you don't need to do anything right after the heart attack. But like, when you're stable enough to be conscious, just lying in hospital, your faculties back, you could just send like one tweet saying "hey just so you all know I didn't die, still retired though". Have a friend or family member post it even
What non cynical reason could there be for waiting months and only announcing you're not dead as part of unretiring. I'm not denying there could be one I'm not thinking of, there must be a lot of hard to imagine things running through someone's mind if the general sketch of the situation is true, but on the face of it I think any reasonable person would be suspicious that she at best allowed people to keep believing she's dead to farm pity and set the stage for a dramatic comeback. Except I have no idea how that comeback is landing as well as it is in light of how suspicious it is.