Your calculation is based on Newtonian physics: mass, bodies traveling through continuos Cartesian space and time, having always defined their positions, momenta, energies, etc. with absolute precision (or if with limited precision: that was only tue to imperfection of our tools, but in deep view they always had real positions and momenta).
Such approach is not valid under QM view and (for small particles) is contrary to experimental results. Heisenberg's principle and experiments like Young's double slit shows, that we cannot speak about well defined positions and momenta. Of course - for macroscopic objects we can measure frequently (billion times per second) their positions (with a nanometer accuracy) such, that thoise measurements do not disturb significantly next measurements.
But you cannot extrapolate such view ab infinitum: you may speak about bodies traveling at 1 micrometer per second, but not about 10-34m/s.
You may speak about measuring speed at some moment of time only in sense, that you measure the speed with some finite accuracy, and measurement must last for a while. You may measure a speed of a cannonball in a microsecond osing optical devices. But if your measurement is supposed to last for 10-30s, you'd have to use really energetic photons - and those photons bouncing from your body would transfer to it more momentum than it had previously.
There is no possible way to measure the speed of 10-34m/s. This is not a technical problem of our tools - it is fundamentally impossible: such measurement would have to last many orders of magnitude longer than age of Universe. Your decelerating body having such speed at some moment of time is only a mathematical idealisation of reality, made under Newtonian assumptions - which perfectly well describe snooker balls traveling at 1m/s, but are not valid at that scale.
There won't be any speed at that moment! In QM speed is something you may measure (and QM predicts probability density distribution of the measurement outcome), but is not a property you may attribute to a particle regardless of the measurement.