. A few weeks ago, in a panic, I texted one of my best friends who is also chronically ill. Was she as worried about catching the Delta variant as I was? How could we put additional symptoms on our already long lists? “I cannot handle any more brain fog on top of the brain fog I have,” I said. “Yeah,” she agreed. “I don’t know, realistically, if I can take another bout of being sick from something new.
Given my health history and eligibility for a third shot, I jumped into action and secured an appointment for August 22. Getting an appointment for the booster was starkly different than getting an appointment for the original shot. The first time, I spent hours combing through the websites of different pharmacies to find an open appointment. For the booster, I casually chose a Sunday afternoon after looking through my options for five minutes.
Still, I felt more anxious leading up to my booster than I did with the two original shots. It’s hard to pinpoint the source of my anxiety: Part of it was shame that I needed a booster shot in the first place ; part was that I only knew one other person who had gotten the booster; and part was worry over how my body would react.
After years of chronic illness, I don’t flinch at needles, so the actual vaccination was easy. I waited in the pharmacy for the required 15 minutes to assess possible side effects, and then went home. By the time I went to sleep on Sunday night, I felt overly lethargic and a little achy. I slept fitfully. I’d pull on a sweatshirt because I felt cold, then strip it off with all my blankets because I felt hot. I woke up in the morning feeling like I was experiencing thewith COVID vaccinations.
I worked for a few hours, then fell headfirst into a three-hour nap. When I woke up, my flulike symptoms were slightly worse. Fortunately, my sister had made her famous homemade chicken noodle soup, which was the only thing I ate that day and the next. I went to sleep early on Monday night, and when I woke up on Tuesday I felt better. The body aches and chills had subsided. All that was left was a vaguely hungover feeling — I was tired and my head hurt but I could function.
Then it’s a third shot not a booster.
Why is a teen getting a booster already, even though it has not been fully approved?
This lovely young lady was brave....I sooo hope that her reaction to that booster CNNnewsroom means she's reay gonna end up with a great amount of antibodies...I hope she's well and thanks so much for sharing. ❤
As far as us getting a booster is taking a vax from someone else..whether it be here or far far away billmaher ...nuts cuz it's HERE at ur local pharmacy just WAITING for u to take advantage of..like it or not. We Americans r very lucky. Get ur VAX & btw👇
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