Take care Frank!
I fly out tomorrow for two weeks with family, and this afternoon I got a text from my mother saying that she and my dad both tested positive. This is going to make everyone's holiday plans complicated, to put it mildly.
Thank you for your wishes, Michael! No further symptoms returned, though remnants of the cough (which was never severe) lingered past Christmas.
Then I worked at getting up. The moment I moved to reach for a shirt my right shoulder felt like I'd been kicked by a mule, and when I managed to sit up to pull that shirt on moderate nausea struck along with more chills. It took me over twenty minutes to get dressed, putting on one piece of clothing at a time then laying back under the covers -- had to actually swing my legs out of bed to get pants on.
Breakfast (low-sugar cereal) didn't want to stay down, and every time I took a drink of juice my stomach tried to send it back. I also got feeling colder and colder to the point I got out snow gear to bundle in! Now it's almost Knox's dinner time and for the first time today I managed a good swallow of juice without my stomach trying to return to sender. So now I'm just chilled and tired.
Seems that some people get acute symptoms after having injections (COVID and otherwise). Interestingly, as far back as I can remember getting vaxxed for anything, I don't remember ever having any reaction to any injections, other than slight soreness in the arm that I barely noticed.
At any rate, I've now had six (or maybe 7?) COVID shots. Yay me.
I've had 7 of them. Spread among six different STATES where I've had them done. I have never lived in any of those six states. (How many people rightfully claim that?)
Here in New York, which was the virus epicenter for a while in 2020, I see very few people wearing masks. The trains and buses are returning to their overloaded, pre-pandemic sardine can hell, and I see only about 5% of riders masking up. Hospitals have resumed mask mandates.
It seems the general public is still so irrevocably mentally scarred by the lockdowns of 2020 that they are unwilling to even consider any degree of social distancing.
I have a good memory, so I haven't forgotten what was going on in
2020, The Year That Took Five Years To Go By. It bothers me to see so few masked people in public. I don't wear my mask at all times, but if I'm heading to any place that may be crowded (e. g. a supermarket, or the train), I WILL wear my mask.
And with all the precautions, including full vaccination, masking and distancing as much as I could while at a conference in Toronto...I knew I was almost sure to get it because probably only 1 in 100 people were masked.
And now it looks like my immuno-compromised partner and I are likely going to have long Covid with respiratory and other issues.
I am calling on Monday though to line us up for RSV shots.
Oh no, no, no. I'm so sorry to read this, man. As your infection was so recent, I HOPE like-heck that you're both mistaken and it's merely gone away slowly. You don't need this. Nobody does (except, well, some certain politicians-and-such whose names shall not be mentioned).
Please look at your Conversations (message sent well before seeing this thread).
These N99 masks are great. They are very comfortable and easy to breathe through. The gasket on the inside facilitates a good face fit and seal, and softens the comfort. They also have adjustable headbands
to tighten the fit properly. Very sturdy and well made.
AGREED! I've been using precisely that product for a while now. I don't believe the filtering is POLARIZED in any way, so I also believe the "common wisdom" that says masks don't also protect you, is false. No protection can be 100% effective short of, maybe, wearing a gas mask. However, I feel they also slash your risk of catching anything.
Both my bouts with COVID (both extremely mild, no fatigue whatsoever, and neither fever hit 101F/38.3C) can be traced to days that I wasn't masked. First time was 27 April 2022 when I went to Kennywood Park (a theme park near Pittsburgh) with temperatures nearly reaching 90 degrees and me being very close to passing out from the damned heat, second time was visiting a friend in central New Jersey who came down with it while I visited (probably got it from the casino they went to, while I visited
Sausy and his brother).
That tells me that masking probably protects me. I don't have quite as much exposure as a daily train-commuter, or somebody who has multiple children in school, but I do have more exposure than the average person.