Good morning!
Rise and shine!
It’s Tuesday, September 14, and it is time to get up and get our of bed!
As I type this Rant out, I have been up for about 45 minutes now after a restless night of sleep.
The pain that I had in my left leg and side has vanished, and it has all moved over to the right side, and I am in a bit of discomfort.
I will do my exercises a bit later and see if it alleviates any of the pain I am having.
Today really is just another day on the calendar for me, but I don’t want to offend anyone; if today is your birthday, then I say “Happy Birthday” to you.
The only thing that I have to do today that is out of the norm is that tonight, I have to go to my doctor for my second shingles shot.
I got my maiden shingles inoculation a few weeks back, and now it is time for number two.
And like the coronavirus shot, I had absolutely no after effects from getting the shot.
I had chicken pox when I was an adult, which is no fun at all, and could actually be lethal, but I was pretty lucky, and came through it with just a few days of discomfort.
I contracted the disease during a vacation that my family and I had in Florida a number of years ago—I got it from both my daughter and my son.
My daughter actually had a mild shingles outbreak during our vacation, and my son had something called “Sunbather’s Eruption,” which is a form of chicken pox. We had no idea that either child had anything wrong with them, and happily, what they had was minor.
Me, I got hit, but again, it could have been worse, much worse.
I had never taken a shingles shot before a few weeks ago, but when my doctor offered it to me this time, I agreed to take it.
And I have heard that many people only take the first shingles shot, and conveniently forget about taking the second.
I just don’t get that.
If you take the first, why shy away from No. 2?
I have heard that people also do this with the coronavirus shot, and I have to wonder why.
But I will get my second shingles shot just like I got my second coronavirus shot, as I consider getting both to be no big deal, at least for me.
I can’t and won’t speak for anyone else, but for me, it’s no big deal.
And funny, we as a civilization have lived through outbreaks of chicken pox, of mumps, of measles and of polio and of whopping cough and of the flu and of the common cold, but we cannot seem to get through the current pandemic, which is something I think we are going to have to learn to live with if we are going to proceed as a civilization.
Yes, it is tragic what some people have had to go through with this disease, but if we take the proper precautions, I do think we will be fine.
Israel has been the model of efficiency with the Pfizer shots, yet we see that many in the country’s population have gotten the virus anyway, which once again puts a spotlight on the lies that we were told and continue to be told about what this “vaccine” does and does not do.
Since Israel has been used as sort of a template for battling the virus by the rest of the world, what happens in that country in their prevention protocols has to be taken seriously, because even though it is such a small nation, it is a vibrant one, and the U.S., as a larger nation, must see what is happening there as sort of a precursor for what is going to happen here.
The people who make the Moderna shot are now talking about offering sometime in the future a “shot cocktail” that will not only involve the coronavirus inoculation, but several other inoculations, all in one, single shot done twice, which might make more people think about taking the shot while it puts off others at the same time.
Anyway, back to the shingles shot …
I take my No. 2 tonight, and then I will be done with that, and I guess I don’t have to worry about getting shingles when that is over with … as if I ever worried about it to begin with.
One prick in my arm, and within about a second, I am done.
I thought the same thing with the coronavirus shot, and I was pretty much correct in my thinking.
Today is just another day in my life, one of about 24,000 days I have lived on this earth.
It’s just another day, and within time, it will fade into other days, and not stand out in any way, shape or form …
I hope.
Rise and shine!
It’s Tuesday, September 14, and it is time to get up and get our of bed!
As I type this Rant out, I have been up for about 45 minutes now after a restless night of sleep.
The pain that I had in my left leg and side has vanished, and it has all moved over to the right side, and I am in a bit of discomfort.
I will do my exercises a bit later and see if it alleviates any of the pain I am having.
Today really is just another day on the calendar for me, but I don’t want to offend anyone; if today is your birthday, then I say “Happy Birthday” to you.
The only thing that I have to do today that is out of the norm is that tonight, I have to go to my doctor for my second shingles shot.
I got my maiden shingles inoculation a few weeks back, and now it is time for number two.
And like the coronavirus shot, I had absolutely no after effects from getting the shot.
I had chicken pox when I was an adult, which is no fun at all, and could actually be lethal, but I was pretty lucky, and came through it with just a few days of discomfort.
I contracted the disease during a vacation that my family and I had in Florida a number of years ago—I got it from both my daughter and my son.
My daughter actually had a mild shingles outbreak during our vacation, and my son had something called “Sunbather’s Eruption,” which is a form of chicken pox. We had no idea that either child had anything wrong with them, and happily, what they had was minor.
Me, I got hit, but again, it could have been worse, much worse.
I had never taken a shingles shot before a few weeks ago, but when my doctor offered it to me this time, I agreed to take it.
And I have heard that many people only take the first shingles shot, and conveniently forget about taking the second.
I just don’t get that.
If you take the first, why shy away from No. 2?
I have heard that people also do this with the coronavirus shot, and I have to wonder why.
But I will get my second shingles shot just like I got my second coronavirus shot, as I consider getting both to be no big deal, at least for me.
I can’t and won’t speak for anyone else, but for me, it’s no big deal.
And funny, we as a civilization have lived through outbreaks of chicken pox, of mumps, of measles and of polio and of whopping cough and of the flu and of the common cold, but we cannot seem to get through the current pandemic, which is something I think we are going to have to learn to live with if we are going to proceed as a civilization.
Yes, it is tragic what some people have had to go through with this disease, but if we take the proper precautions, I do think we will be fine.
Israel has been the model of efficiency with the Pfizer shots, yet we see that many in the country’s population have gotten the virus anyway, which once again puts a spotlight on the lies that we were told and continue to be told about what this “vaccine” does and does not do.
Since Israel has been used as sort of a template for battling the virus by the rest of the world, what happens in that country in their prevention protocols has to be taken seriously, because even though it is such a small nation, it is a vibrant one, and the U.S., as a larger nation, must see what is happening there as sort of a precursor for what is going to happen here.
The people who make the Moderna shot are now talking about offering sometime in the future a “shot cocktail” that will not only involve the coronavirus inoculation, but several other inoculations, all in one, single shot done twice, which might make more people think about taking the shot while it puts off others at the same time.
Anyway, back to the shingles shot …
I take my No. 2 tonight, and then I will be done with that, and I guess I don’t have to worry about getting shingles when that is over with … as if I ever worried about it to begin with.
One prick in my arm, and within about a second, I am done.
I thought the same thing with the coronavirus shot, and I was pretty much correct in my thinking.
Today is just another day in my life, one of about 24,000 days I have lived on this earth.
It’s just another day, and within time, it will fade into other days, and not stand out in any way, shape or form …
I hope.
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