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Hey just a heads up the wife and I got our first shots on Thursday at Dillons in hutch. They don't care what county people are from and they are taking 65 and older. I spent 3 hours on Wednesday clicking on Dillons web site till they stared posting appointments .
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Originally posted by SHOXJOCK View PostHey just a heads up the wife and I got our first shots on Thursday at Dillons in hutch. They don't care what county people are from and they are taking 65 and older. I spent 3 hours on Wednesday clicking on Dillons web site till they stared posting appointments .Livin the dream
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I got my second vaccine shot on Wednesday afternoon. Felt fine the rest of the day. Woke up feeling tired with a “head cold” so decided to work from home. About 2:30 I started to get chills and it got bad fast. I was shaking, my hands turned blue and I was in my full outdoor attire and under four blankets. Took some Tylenol and went to sleep. Woke up at 5:30 and fever was gone. Now my body aches from the 2+ hours of intense shivering.
These symptoms are common, but not the majority. Most people experience no symptoms, and headache/mild fatigue is generally what occurs.Livin the dream
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Originally posted by wufan View PostI got my second vaccine shot on Wednesday afternoon. Felt fine the rest of the day. Woke up feeling tired with a “head cold” so decided to work from home. About 2:30 I started to get chills and it got bad fast. I was shaking, my hands turned blue and I was in my full outdoor attire and under four blankets. Took some Tylenol and went to sleep. Woke up at 5:30 and fever was gone. Now my body aches from the 2+ hours of intense shivering.
These symptoms are common, but not the majority. Most people experience no symptoms, and headache/mild fatigue is generally what occurs.
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Originally posted by atlwsu View Post
Got my 2nd shot yesterday. Woke up last night with somewhat of a fever. Some aching this morning. Hope this is the worst of it.Deuces Valley.
... No really, deuces.
________________
"Enjoy the ride."
- a smart man
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Originally posted by ShockerFever View Post
Didn’t you recently have a bout with covid? I thought you couldn’t be administered the vaccine until 90 days after testing negative. Or am I misremembering?
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It's generally believed that the more severe your experience with Das Alien, the more robust your immunity. It's also believed that the vaccine gives you protection along the lines of a severe experience. I know healthcare workers who've had serious bouts jump at the chance of a vaccine, but it was beyond 90 days. I would say take the ****er, every day and twice on Sunday if available.
An interesting anecdote: A group (40's and 50's) involved in a super-spreader event, had a varying level of sickness (but most were quite ill for a time). All donated plasma, but only the one person who was the sickest was allowed to donate the longest, as the others had undetectable antibodies after several months. This speaks nothing about ultimate immunity and/or T-Cell readiness, it is just an interesting anecdote, and perhaps instructive.
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Originally posted by wufan View PostI got my second vaccine shot on Wednesday afternoon. Felt fine the rest of the day. Woke up feeling tired with a “head cold” so decided to work from home. About 2:30 I started to get chills and it got bad fast. I was shaking, my hands turned blue and I was in my full outdoor attire and under four blankets. Took some Tylenol and went to sleep. Woke up at 5:30 and fever was gone. Now my body aches from the 2+ hours of intense shivering.
These symptoms are common, but not the majority. Most people experience no symptoms, and headache/mild fatigue is generally what occurs.
A lesser man would bump the mockery you generously offered me about gnarly Covid vaccine experiences. I am not that man. And it's more common than you think. A sore-ass shoulder with a headache and mild fatigue should be expected at the minimum.
I would leave you with: go in peace my son; rejoice in the guardian angels you now have flowing through your veins.
P.S. Good thing you didn't catch the real McCoy with your hypersensitive immune system eh? ;)
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https://www.vox.com/2021/2/20/222808...icu-ventilator
What it’s like to die from Covid-19
“I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy”: Doctors describe what their sickest coronavirus patients endure.“Most of what I’m seeing is behind closed curtains, and the general public isn’t seeing this side of it,” says Todd Rice, a critical care and pulmonology specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Even “families are only seeing a little bit of it,” he says. As a result, most of us have been “protected and sheltered from seeing the worst of this disease.”
So what have these nearly 500,000 people endured as the infection took over and their bodies failed? The terrible details have been strikingly absent from most of our personal and national discussions about the virus. But if we have been thus far (perhaps somewhat willfully) blind to the excruciating ways Covid-19 takes lives, this milestone is an opportunity to open our eyes.
Four physicians, who collectively have cared for more than 100 dying Covid-19 patients over the past 11 months,shared withVox what their patients have gone through physically and mentally as the virus killed them. Their experiences reveal the isolating and invasive realities of what it is typically like for someone to die from Covid-19.
Lungs “full of bees” and a “sense of impending doom”
The torture of Covid-19 can begin long before someone is sick enough to be admitted to a hospital intensive care unit.....
I scare because I care.
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Originally posted by C0|dB|00ded View Post
A contradiction ^^^
A lesser man would bump the mockery you generously offered me about gnarly Covid vaccine experiences. I am not that man. And it's more common than you think. A sore-ass shoulder with a headache and mild fatigue should be expected at the minimum.
I would leave you with: go in peace my son; rejoice in the guardian angels you now have flowing through your veins.
P.S. Good thing you didn't catch the real McCoy with your hypersensitive immune system eh? ;)
And yes, I would gladly take three hours of that horrible fever than 3 days.Livin the dream
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Originally posted by wufan View Post
No, you’re right. I read that after I typed it. The first part is true. The second part is true of those that do experience symptoms. Thanks for allowing me to clarify.
And yes, I would gladly take three hours of that horrible fever than 3 days.
Shocked that you would describe the fever as "horrible". If you aren't a wimp, then I would say your reaction to the vaccine was definitely in the minority. We know ScRatChY is a wimp, so I can't reliably compare his experience to yours.
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