You also have long covid right?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
You also have long covid right?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
I too am boosted and bionic. It's great.PJYoung said:
No regrets.
Got the booster a couple of weeks ago and even though I haven't had the covid I feel almost bullet proof.
Sorry Dr.Marcus, you see the worst of it daily but when it strikes close to home it's hard to ignore the clutter of this board. Many of us value your contributions and appreciate your daily efforts on behalf of people who didn't need to be there.Marcus Aurelius said:
Belittle all you want. But. My partner's dtr - a staunch anti virus/vax person - now has covid. 40 y/o. She is dying on ECMO/VENT/Dialysis. Unvaccinated. . I have had 6 unvaccinated new ones today. All tenuous. I am sick of it. It is a massive burden on health care now. Rant over. GN.
The other is using the catch phrase "do no harm"BoerneAg11 said:
Nothing conveys someone's lack of intelligence faster than referring to a vaccine as 'the JAB'
Edit (assuming they aren't English)
Yes, long haul covid symptoms. But the dizzy spells happened after the vaccine. Ive read its a common symptom from the pfizer vaccine.Charpie said:Wait.ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
You also had covid, did you not?
Hey, how ya' doing ea? Did you ever go to the doctor to get your heart checked?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
Correct.bay fan said:You also have long covid right?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
Ive been trying to see my doctor for weeks but she is all booked up. But reading other long haulers stories, typically their blood work came back fine and the doctor said they were normal. I suspect the same will happen for me.GeographyAg said:Hey, how ya' doing ea? Did you ever go to the doctor to get your heart checked?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
If I remember correctly you had Covid and then still had long-covid symptoms when you were vaccinated, right?
Then *two weeks* after you were vaccinated the arm pain and dizziness began, correct?
Last time you posted that's what you said if I recall. It seems like this probably has to do more with your original long-covid symptoms and/or some other underlying condition than a vaccine taken two weeks before those symptoms began, imho, but I'm no doctor.
I sincerely hope you'll get yourself checked thoroughly. You might have some long-term damage from the Covid that needs to be checked out.
I'm praying for you.
I'm really sorry you're still experiencing symptoms. How long has this been going on? How long has it been since the original covid infection? How long since the vaccine? It seems like you might need to try to find a new doctor, if you can, depending on how bad this dizziness and pain is. I hope you can find a good one who will really look at you thoroughly. Maybe an EKG and stress test are in order?ea1060 said:Ive been trying to see my doctor for weeks but she is all booked up. But reading other long haulers stories, typically their blood work came back fine and the doctor said they were normal. I suspect the same will happen for me.GeographyAg said:Hey, how ya' doing ea? Did you ever go to the doctor to get your heart checked?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
If I remember correctly you had Covid and then still had long-covid symptoms when you were vaccinated, right?
Then *two weeks* after you were vaccinated the arm pain and dizziness began, correct?
Last time you posted that's what you said if I recall. It seems like this probably has to do more with your original long-covid symptoms and/or some other underlying condition than a vaccine taken two weeks before those symptoms began, imho, but I'm no doctor.
I sincerely hope you'll get yourself checked thoroughly. You might have some long-term damage from the Covid that needs to be checked out.
I'm praying for you.
Yes, I have long haul symptoms. Yes, 2 weeks after the vaccine I started experiencing arm pain and dizziness. It made my long haul symptoms much worse. I basically have symptoms everyday now, whereas before I would feel fine for a week, then sick for a week etc.
Covid long hauler for 15 and a half months. Post vaccine symptoms for 4 months.GeographyAg said:I'm really sorry you're still experiencing symptoms. How long has this been going on? How long has it been since the original covid infection? How long since the vaccine? It seems like you might need to try to find a new doctor, if you can, depending on how bad this dizziness and pain is. I hope you can find a good one who will really look at you thoroughly. Maybe an EKG and stress test are in order?ea1060 said:Ive been trying to see my doctor for weeks but she is all booked up. But reading other long haulers stories, typically their blood work came back fine and the doctor said they were normal. I suspect the same will happen for me.GeographyAg said:Hey, how ya' doing ea? Did you ever go to the doctor to get your heart checked?ea1060 said:
I do. Since I got the jab 4 months ago Ive had post vaccine symptoms almost everyday: dizzy/light headed spells, arm pain, bad headaches. Wish I had never gotten it.
If I remember correctly you had Covid and then still had long-covid symptoms when you were vaccinated, right?
Then *two weeks* after you were vaccinated the arm pain and dizziness began, correct?
Last time you posted that's what you said if I recall. It seems like this probably has to do more with your original long-covid symptoms and/or some other underlying condition than a vaccine taken two weeks before those symptoms began, imho, but I'm no doctor.
I sincerely hope you'll get yourself checked thoroughly. You might have some long-term damage from the Covid that needs to be checked out.
I'm praying for you.
Yes, I have long haul symptoms. Yes, 2 weeks after the vaccine I started experiencing arm pain and dizziness. It made my long haul symptoms much worse. I basically have symptoms everyday now, whereas before I would feel fine for a week, then sick for a week etc.
Funny how some people (presumably college educated) start a thread and forgot the title they used to introduce it. Just maybe people were responding to the title and not the question that followed it. If you did not want to know about regrets, then you probably should have left it out of the title. I am eagerly awaiting your next condescending criticism.fromKyle said:
Funny how many people (presumably college educated) can't read the question and chimed in that they had no regrets, when that wasn't the question.
Im sorry to hear that you are dealing with this. So basically almost everyday since I got the vaccine, I get dizzy/light headed spells for an hour or so. Very disoriented. After the dizzy spells occur then the covid symptoms hit: feverish feeling, warm, chills, achy, ear ache, arm pain, leg pain, brain fog, fatigue. Although lately the dizzy spells have lasted longer and longer, sometimes for hours, or all day.CS78 said:
Tell me about your long haul symptoms or more specifically the dizziness. How would you describe your symptoms? I deal with PPPD(persistent postural perceptive dizziness) every day after a sinus surgery that went wrong and I ended up sedated in ICU for a number of days. It's a fairly new and obscure diagnosis. It usually is associated with some sort of "trauma". It can be physical trauma like a car wreck or psychological or just a high stress situation like an illness. Even though I have links that point to my issue originating from a physiological basis, there is definitely a psychological aspect as well. The good thing is there are treatments that can help. Sorry for all the mumbo jumbo. See if this sounds like you at all.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29036855/
This must be that fear mongering I hear so many people talking about these days.FlowCtlr said:
I just hope everyone's answer to this question is still "no" a few years from now. Likely will still be "no" but you just never know.
You know what's better than the vaccines and doesn't require a booster? Natural immunity from a prior infection.NJaggie said:
No regrets! None. Cant wait to get moderna booster.
Well, the 'worst' of COVID for millions of people is not knowing they were sick. And the 'worst' of COVID for millions more people is a slight cold. And the 'worst' of COVID for even more millions of people is a week of fatigue and a slight fever. Shocking as this might sound, COVID is not a guaranteed death sentence or a guaranteed hospitalization.WES2006AG said:
No regrets at all:
-Had a bad case of COVID/COVID Pneumonia in March 2020
-First shot of Moderna in January
-Second shot in February
-Booster in August
I am immunocompromised after an organ transplant so getting all of my shots was a VERY easy decision. I only wish I had had the option to get vaccinated before I was horribly sick back in 2020. I can't imagine having the option to avoid getting the worst of COVID and choosing not to.
I'm so sorry you're having a bad reaction. That's too bad. I hope it's gone in a day or two.YouBet said:
I'm regretting it in the moment. I got my second shot yesterday and I basically have full on flu like illness. Fever for 6 hours last night and I feel like someone beat the sh^t out of me from head to toe with a baseball bat. I can barely move and still have a headache. Was completely fine and within literally 5 minutes I was bedridden and felt like I was dying.
And, man, I don't understand people who are celebrating and "can't wait!" to get the booster. That is a borderline psychotic reaction.
GeographyAg said:I'm so sorry you're having a bad reaction. That's too bad. I hope it's gone in a day or two.YouBet said:
I'm regretting it in the moment. I got my second shot yesterday and I basically have full on flu like illness. Fever for 6 hours last night and I feel like someone beat the sh^t out of me from head to toe with a baseball bat. I can barely move and still have a headache. Was completely fine and within literally 5 minutes I was bedridden and felt like I was dying.
And, man, I don't understand people who are celebrating and "can't wait!" to get the booster. That is a borderline psychotic reaction.
I must say, though, that It is offensive to call those of us who are happy to have a booster available "borderline psychotic." Do you know our health history? Do you know our age and situation?
How would you feel if people said not getting the vaccine is "borderline psychotic" ?
My parents are celebrating getting the booster. They are in their 80s with age-related health conditions. They had ZERO reaction to their first two covid shots, and aren't at all worried about the third. They've avoided getting COVID and are happy to take another booster if it will give them a chance to fight the virus if they get exposed. They aren't hiding in the house, btw, nor are they wearing masks.
I personally think their mental health is very good and they're thinking clearly when they celebrate the availability of the vaccines that can help them avoid diseases.
You are right that COVID is no guarantee of a bad outcome. The problem is you are actually going to have to get COVID to see which part of the outcome statistics you personally fall into and for some they will find out too late that they underestimated their risk of serious COVID.El Chupacabra said:Well, the 'worst' of COVID for millions of people is not knowing they were sick. And the 'worst' of COVID for millions more people is a slight cold. And the 'worst' of COVID for even more millions of people is a week of fatigue and a slight fever. Shocking as this might sound, COVID is not a guaranteed death sentence or a guaranteed hospitalization.WES2006AG said:
No regrets at all:
-Had a bad case of COVID/COVID Pneumonia in March 2020
-First shot of Moderna in January
-Second shot in February
-Booster in August
I am immunocompromised after an organ transplant so getting all of my shots was a VERY easy decision. I only wish I had had the option to get vaccinated before I was horribly sick back in 2020. I can't imagine having the option to avoid getting the worst of COVID and choosing not to.
Really? Are you "borderline psychotic" ?03_Aggie said:GeographyAg said:I'm so sorry you're having a bad reaction. That's too bad. I hope it's gone in a day or two.YouBet said:
I'm regretting it in the moment. I got my second shot yesterday and I basically have full on flu like illness. Fever for 6 hours last night and I feel like someone beat the sh^t out of me from head to toe with a baseball bat. I can barely move and still have a headache. Was completely fine and within literally 5 minutes I was bedridden and felt like I was dying.
And, man, I don't understand people who are celebrating and "can't wait!" to get the booster. That is a borderline psychotic reaction.
I must say, though, that It is offensive to call those of us who are happy to have a booster available "borderline psychotic." Do you know our health history? Do you know our age and situation?
How would you feel if people said not getting the vaccine is "borderline psychotic" ?
My parents are celebrating getting the booster. They are in their 80s with age-related health conditions. They had ZERO reaction to their first two covid shots, and aren't at all worried about the third. They've avoided getting COVID and are happy to take another booster if it will give them a chance to fight the virus if they get exposed. They aren't hiding in the house, btw, nor are they wearing masks.
I personally think their mental health is very good and they're thinking clearly when they celebrate the availability of the vaccines that can help them avoid diseases.
Good lord quit being so damn sensitive.
GeographyAg said:Really? Are you "borderline psychotic" ?03_Aggie said:GeographyAg said:I'm so sorry you're having a bad reaction. That's too bad. I hope it's gone in a day or two.YouBet said:
I'm regretting it in the moment. I got my second shot yesterday and I basically have full on flu like illness. Fever for 6 hours last night and I feel like someone beat the sh^t out of me from head to toe with a baseball bat. I can barely move and still have a headache. Was completely fine and within literally 5 minutes I was bedridden and felt like I was dying.
And, man, I don't understand people who are celebrating and "can't wait!" to get the booster. That is a borderline psychotic reaction.
I must say, though, that It is offensive to call those of us who are happy to have a booster available "borderline psychotic." Do you know our health history? Do you know our age and situation?
How would you feel if people said not getting the vaccine is "borderline psychotic" ?
My parents are celebrating getting the booster. They are in their 80s with age-related health conditions. They had ZERO reaction to their first two covid shots, and aren't at all worried about the third. They've avoided getting COVID and are happy to take another booster if it will give them a chance to fight the virus if they get exposed. They aren't hiding in the house, btw, nor are they wearing masks.
I personally think their mental health is very good and they're thinking clearly when they celebrate the availability of the vaccines that can help them avoid diseases.
Good lord quit being so damn sensitive.
I'm actually not at all sensitive. I truly do not care what the poor guy who suffered a bad headache and fever for 6 hours has to say about me. waaa
I am, however, pointing out the hypocrisy of the attitude of "leave me alone and don't criticize me if I don't want to get the vaccine" with the mean-spirited nastiness of putting down people as insane for thinking differently.
I'm sorry if that went over your head.
Sigh.03_Aggie said:GeographyAg said:Really? Are you "borderline psychotic" ?03_Aggie said:GeographyAg said:I'm so sorry you're having a bad reaction. That's too bad. I hope it's gone in a day or two.YouBet said:
I'm regretting it in the moment. I got my second shot yesterday and I basically have full on flu like illness. Fever for 6 hours last night and I feel like someone beat the sh^t out of me from head to toe with a baseball bat. I can barely move and still have a headache. Was completely fine and within literally 5 minutes I was bedridden and felt like I was dying.
And, man, I don't understand people who are celebrating and "can't wait!" to get the booster. That is a borderline psychotic reaction.
I must say, though, that It is offensive to call those of us who are happy to have a booster available "borderline psychotic." Do you know our health history? Do you know our age and situation?
How would you feel if people said not getting the vaccine is "borderline psychotic" ?
My parents are celebrating getting the booster. They are in their 80s with age-related health conditions. They had ZERO reaction to their first two covid shots, and aren't at all worried about the third. They've avoided getting COVID and are happy to take another booster if it will give them a chance to fight the virus if they get exposed. They aren't hiding in the house, btw, nor are they wearing masks.
I personally think their mental health is very good and they're thinking clearly when they celebrate the availability of the vaccines that can help them avoid diseases.
Good lord quit being so damn sensitive.
I'm actually not at all sensitive. I truly do not care what the poor guy who suffered a bad headache and fever for 6 hours has to say about me. waaa
I am, however, pointing out the hypocrisy of the attitude of "leave me alone and don't criticize me if I don't want to get the vaccine" with the mean-spirited nastiness of putting down people as insane for thinking differently.
I'm sorry if that went over your head.
Oh it's not over my head. The person that called people crazy for waiting to get a booster is a vaccinated person. So where's the hypocrisy again?