Woman who suffered 3 heart attacks at age 40 wants women to know this about heart disease

February is American Heart Month.

One woman dies of cardiovascular diseases, including stroke, every 80 seconds and the majority are preventable, the AHA says.

Tara Robinson, a teacher and U.S. Army veteran in Fort Worth, Texas, said she suffered three heart attacks in one week at the age of 40. Four years later, Robinson is a survivor and an ambassador for Go Red for Women, working to raise awareness of the issue of women and heart disease.

Robinson shares in her own words how she survived the heart attacks and what she wants woman to know about heart disease.

Like most women, I was just going through life doing my time as a wife, mother, sister, businesswoman and a full-time employee.

I thought I was taking care of myself by going to the doctor annually, exercising occasionally, and eating well (or so I thought). If I had anything to worry about regarding my health, it was the two benign knots that were found on my left breast earlier that year.

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

I was self-diagnosing and the self-prescribed order was to continue ignoring the warning signs that something was wrong.

She told me I seriously needed to go to the hospital, but I still didn’t heed the warnings. I told her I would wait for my annual checkup later on in January.

My doctor and I were both puzzled. She said it was probably stress and I left her office thinking it was.

The doctor said the symptoms I was describing were ones of a heart attack, but those words went in one ear and out the other. I was too young to be having a heart attack and the doctor agreed.

I ended up having another heart attack the next day on April 11, then a massive heart attack on April 12. I "died" the day of the third heart attack from 99 percent blockage in my main artery, known as the "widow maker." Luckily God said "not yet," and I’m still here to share my story.

It is because of the work of the American Heart Association that I received a stent and I’m able to advocate for their Go Red For Women movement and help save other women from their number-one killer: heart disease.

It could be the difference between life are death.