My entire unvaxed family is in the midst of our 3rd go around of covid right now. April 21, Jan 22, and now. The first 2 for me, I had barely any symptoms. Extremely mild! This one was a little rough and lasted a week, but still just a unpleasant head cold. This is our experience.
My entire unvaxed family is in the midst of our 3rd go around of covid right now. April 21, Jan 22, and now. The first 2 for me, I had barely any symptoms. Extremely mild! This one was a little rough and lasted a week, but still just a unpleasant head cold. This is our experience.
Our extended family has had what "tested positive as covid" on rapid tests for the last two weeks. I'm not sure what those stupid tests show, to be honest. Everyone is unvaxxed. However, things went like this:
1) Daughter in law got sick, she felt kind of bad for one day, sniffles after that, totally fine within a few days. Worth noting: She got covid a year ago a couple of days after having her baby. (The baby never got anything at all even as a newborn).
2) Her 1 year old got sick 3 days after mom this time: lethargic one day, a bit of sniffles, fine by day 3
3) Daughter in law's mom got sick about a week later, she's still sick after a week of it, and so far she has been the sickest of everyone. She's a fanatical lefty vegan...does that impact things? :)
4) Daughter in law's husband tested positive after about a week, no real symptoms. He tested for the fun of it, "just to see", and was surprised at the positive.
5) My daughter was around them all...she had the original Covid in November 2020 and was fairly sick back then, has caught nothing at all since that time (19+ months). She was surprised to test positive for her case of the sniffles, and was hardly sick at all. Headache and lack of energy for a day. Being a nurse and testing positive, she had to be off work for a week as that idiocy continues.
6) Husband and I were around them early on but didn't catch anything. Or if we did, we had no symptoms. Of course we didn't test!
Another thought related to my above comment. My son got sick with a respiratory thing in late February. My husband got it in early March, and it was mostly upper respiratory and he felt crummy for about a week. Then I got it and similar symptoms. What I remember most was an endlessly runny nose....I'd clear it out and it was immediately full again. I was lacking in energy, mild headache for a few days, almost no appetite. It took a week or more to go away, and I felt kind of "not so great" for at least 2 weeks. We got a couple of rapid tests from our nurse daughter, they were negative.
Then in early May darned if we both didn't get something similar again, although this time it was much milder and went away quickly. We didn't bother testing with this one.
We are all unvaxxed, and haven't been around many people except in stores, so no telling where this came from.
This is when I concluded that various forms of flu and respiratory type colds are circulating as this kind of thing seems to be fairly common where I live. No big woof. People have forgotten what flu and colds are like. Duh
An yet another thought....My daughter works in a nursing rehab hospital. For the last several months there have been a lot of "covid" cases, almost all with the vaxxed staff and residents. The unvaxxed (daughter is one) have been oddly immune from all this despite being around a lot of MILDLY sick people. No one has died, despite patients being old and/or sick and moving towards their final days anyway. She even had a 400 pound patient who never caught anything at all! So my daughter has been in constant contact with covid infested people and never got sick until last week. And what she got, really wasn't much of anything.
I was wrong. I have it right now. Not garden variety flu. I've had that. This is weird and different; random night sweats, metallic taste in the mouth, headache, loss of taste... not the flu.
My guess is that the farther away the variant from the strain you originally had, the more likely you are to get it.
In other words, as long as they keep giving out boosters, we'll get more variants and we'll all keep getting sick. That's our new reality.
Thank you for your kind words Bart. This has to be a bio-weapon. The symptoms are so random, and so different between individuals. I suspect it might have something to do with blood type. I also suspect that if you had a very severe case the first time, the next time won't be as bad.
If you look online for "detox from the spike protein," there are a variety of things the vaxxed can do to improve their immune health. Not sure if it will help any, but I don't think it would hurt.
Not so. You're a very rare person if you have not had multiple bouts of flu and (especially) colds in your life. While those, especially colds, are a much more diverse collection of viruses, the comparison is still relevant. Viruses naturally mutate, especially ones like SARS-CoV-2
My entire family was laid low with Hong Kong flu in 1966 (Hawai'i got hit hard). I still remember my mother dragging herself out of her bed and going from one kid's bedside to the next. The sig oth remembers people on his street dying from Asian flu in 1957. Devastating flus, and they passed without the bureaucratic bs. They'll never let another opportunity like that go by again.
My entire unvaxed family is in the midst of our 3rd go around of covid right now. April 21, Jan 22, and now. The first 2 for me, I had barely any symptoms. Extremely mild! This one was a little rough and lasted a week, but still just a unpleasant head cold. This is our experience.
Our extended family has had what "tested positive as covid" on rapid tests for the last two weeks. I'm not sure what those stupid tests show, to be honest. Everyone is unvaxxed. However, things went like this:
1) Daughter in law got sick, she felt kind of bad for one day, sniffles after that, totally fine within a few days. Worth noting: She got covid a year ago a couple of days after having her baby. (The baby never got anything at all even as a newborn).
2) Her 1 year old got sick 3 days after mom this time: lethargic one day, a bit of sniffles, fine by day 3
3) Daughter in law's mom got sick about a week later, she's still sick after a week of it, and so far she has been the sickest of everyone. She's a fanatical lefty vegan...does that impact things? :)
4) Daughter in law's husband tested positive after about a week, no real symptoms. He tested for the fun of it, "just to see", and was surprised at the positive.
5) My daughter was around them all...she had the original Covid in November 2020 and was fairly sick back then, has caught nothing at all since that time (19+ months). She was surprised to test positive for her case of the sniffles, and was hardly sick at all. Headache and lack of energy for a day. Being a nurse and testing positive, she had to be off work for a week as that idiocy continues.
6) Husband and I were around them early on but didn't catch anything. Or if we did, we had no symptoms. Of course we didn't test!
IT'S A FRIGGING COLD
Another thought related to my above comment. My son got sick with a respiratory thing in late February. My husband got it in early March, and it was mostly upper respiratory and he felt crummy for about a week. Then I got it and similar symptoms. What I remember most was an endlessly runny nose....I'd clear it out and it was immediately full again. I was lacking in energy, mild headache for a few days, almost no appetite. It took a week or more to go away, and I felt kind of "not so great" for at least 2 weeks. We got a couple of rapid tests from our nurse daughter, they were negative.
Then in early May darned if we both didn't get something similar again, although this time it was much milder and went away quickly. We didn't bother testing with this one.
We are all unvaxxed, and haven't been around many people except in stores, so no telling where this came from.
This is when I concluded that various forms of flu and respiratory type colds are circulating as this kind of thing seems to be fairly common where I live. No big woof. People have forgotten what flu and colds are like. Duh
An yet another thought....My daughter works in a nursing rehab hospital. For the last several months there have been a lot of "covid" cases, almost all with the vaxxed staff and residents. The unvaxxed (daughter is one) have been oddly immune from all this despite being around a lot of MILDLY sick people. No one has died, despite patients being old and/or sick and moving towards their final days anyway. She even had a 400 pound patient who never caught anything at all! So my daughter has been in constant contact with covid infested people and never got sick until last week. And what she got, really wasn't much of anything.
Unvaxxed people should only get covid and transmit it Once. The other two episodes should be just garden variety cold or flu.
I thought you couldn't get it again.
I was wrong. I have it right now. Not garden variety flu. I've had that. This is weird and different; random night sweats, metallic taste in the mouth, headache, loss of taste... not the flu.
My guess is that the farther away the variant from the strain you originally had, the more likely you are to get it.
In other words, as long as they keep giving out boosters, we'll get more variants and we'll all keep getting sick. That's our new reality.
Thank you for your kind words Bart. This has to be a bio-weapon. The symptoms are so random, and so different between individuals. I suspect it might have something to do with blood type. I also suspect that if you had a very severe case the first time, the next time won't be as bad.
If you look online for "detox from the spike protein," there are a variety of things the vaxxed can do to improve their immune health. Not sure if it will help any, but I don't think it would hurt.
Garden variety flu - I have had it for two weeks!! I have to think Corona would have been milder.
Not so. You're a very rare person if you have not had multiple bouts of flu and (especially) colds in your life. While those, especially colds, are a much more diverse collection of viruses, the comparison is still relevant. Viruses naturally mutate, especially ones like SARS-CoV-2
My entire family was laid low with Hong Kong flu in 1966 (Hawai'i got hit hard). I still remember my mother dragging herself out of her bed and going from one kid's bedside to the next. The sig oth remembers people on his street dying from Asian flu in 1957. Devastating flus, and they passed without the bureaucratic bs. They'll never let another opportunity like that go by again.
Why all the testing?