Aren't you like 80? I figured you got it a long time ago.Got the 1st Pfizer shot last week - no issues other than a little soreness in shoulder that day.
Just feels like 80Aren't you like 80? I figured you got it a long time ago.
Jose Cuervo?Jose does that to you.Just feels like 80
Days 2 and 3 after the vaccine have been fine. Basically one day of side effects, most notably soreness and light-headedness. I still worked all day.Jayrod said:So, I got my first round of Pfizer vaccine on Monday. Yesterday was rough. I had the virus back in December, so I don't know if that affected it or not. But all day yesterday I was very sore head to toe and dizzy and lightheaded throughout most of the afternoon. I went home and ate dinner and just basically crashed for the night. Woke up this morning everything is pretty much back to normal, but for a day it was pretty rough.
The only thing they did where I went was take my temperature - you do feel out a standard form about "how are you feeling today" but unless you are running a fever I would think you are fine. Obviously if you have other symptoms and are concerned you may actually have COVID you should probably reschedule and talk to your doctor/get tested.Got round 1 scheduled for next Tuesday. My allergies have been whipping up all week. Anyone know if that's still a go if I can't clear this stuff up before then?
I think that makes senseFor those of you who had body aches and such with the 2nd shots, if you had two little kids, would you recommend spacing husband and wife out a few days on the 2nd shot so you're not both knocked out at the same time? Just wondering how bad it is.
I ask because my wife, kids, and I all had the flu at the same dang time a month ago and it was miserable trying to take care of two little ones on very little rest for two or three days. So if there is a chance that the 2nd shot knocks us both out, I'm thinking we should separate ours out a week-ish so at least one of us is actually useful while the other feels like crap. Although, this is all hypothetical at this point since we are not likely to be eligible for the vaccine for quite a while yet.
Longer term won't the vaccine be available to everyone? And just the people who don't want it or medically cannot get it will be left? Isn't that just more Darwin award nominees for the former group?IvanKaramazov said:I think this is the no-brainer solution, and it's the one we're going to end up settling on regardless because it's the path of least resistance.
If I were living in a state like Maryland where -- I gather -- it's still really hard to get vaccinated, I would be pretty ticked off that folks identically situated to me are able to get vaccinated at their convenience in so many other states. Not mad at anybody in particular of course, just mad at the situation. I'm in 100% sympathy on this point.
On the other hand, my primary concern is getting me and my family vaccinated. Once that's taken care of, and once vaccines are widely available to everybody, I mostly just don't care what other people do. If they don't want the shot, they don't take the shot. No problem.
But I'm not going to sit around and worry about what the most frightened and scientifically illiterate among us do. I'm burning all of my masks and living my life as normal once I get a couple of weeks past dose #2. I don't harbor any ill will toward people who don't get vaccinated, but I'm not budging an inch for their benefit. I'm completely comfortable being selfish on this topic.
Space it out or have someone come help. My wife and I got the shots the same day. My MIL stayed with us for the weekend (she is fully vaccinated).For those of you who had body aches and such with the 2nd shots, if you had two little kids, would you recommend spacing husband and wife out a few days on the 2nd shot so you're not both knocked out at the same time? Just wondering how bad it is.
I ask because my wife, kids, and I all had the flu at the same dang time a month ago and it was miserable trying to take care of two little ones on very little rest for two or three days. So if there is a chance that the 2nd shot knocks us both out, I'm thinking we should separate ours out a week-ish so at least one of us is actually useful while the other feels like crap. Although, this is all hypothetical at this point since we are not likely to be eligible for the vaccine for quite a while yet.
That's no joke. My liver can't handle much more of him leading Spurs.Jose does that to you.
I’m on the same schedule as you, today was the first day I’ve felt myself. Lot of joint and back stiffness, nothing serious.Days 2 and 3 after the vaccine have been fine. Basically one day of side effects, most notably soreness and light-headedness. I still worked all day.
From what I've heard/read, having the virus before often does make the reaction to the 1st shot more unpleasant. My dad was infected last fall and the first jab really beat him up.Jayrod said:So, I got my first round of Pfizer vaccine on Monday. Yesterday was rough. I had the virus back in December, so I don't know if that affected it or not. But all day yesterday I was very sore head to toe and dizzy and lightheaded throughout most of the afternoon. I went home and ate dinner and just basically crashed for the night. Woke up this morning everything is pretty much back to normal, but for a day it was pretty rough.
I had it last April, fairly mild both rounds. But so many factors it’s hard to generalize.From what I've heard/read, having the virus before often does make the reaction to the 1st shot more unpleasant. My dad was infected last fall and the first jab really beat him up.
I had it in mid-December and then got the first shot on Jan 22 and it hit me pretty hard from about hour 12 until hour 30 or so. After that I was fine. 2nd shot was a tiny bit of something but not much.From what I've heard/read, having the virus before often does make the reaction to the 1st shot more unpleasant. My dad was infected last fall and the first jab really beat him up.
Couldn't of been easier yesterday. Got Pfizer. Pleasant people arrived a bit early and was out before my scheduled appointment time was to start. Location was a huge ballroom music playing overhead, nice atmosphere all around.Get my first dose in 2 hours.
Doing my part to get my state to move from #2 to #1.
https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/public-health/states-ranked-by-percentage-of-covid-19-vaccines-administered.html
Took me 2.5 hours from getting in line to getting out. Absolutely worth it though. The line moves relatively quickly, as they are injecting probably 20 people all the time, but there's just a lot of people to go through. Glad to see a diverse crowd there (racial, age, abilities, etc.)I'm in line right now to get my first shot. Pfizer. Baltimore Convention Center mass vax site.
Dull ache that doesn't go away could be a kidney infection. I had one once but the pain eventually became severe and unbearable and I had no appetite.Random question - I'm trying to figure out the root of some pain I'm having. I got the Moderna vaccine on Tuesday. 1st dose. I also did a lot of yard work on Sunday...1st time this spring.
Today (worse than yesterday), my back is killing me. I often have back issues...this just feels different. Just a dull pain. nothing seems to get rid of it. Normally, my back gets tight. This is sore...
Anybody experience anything like that with vaccine dose #1? I want to chalk it up to yard work...but just not sure.
What a disappointing storyWDIK2 said:I had to stop at Walmart on the way home. A lady from the pharmacy approached me on the other end of the store and asked if I wanted a shot because they had 3 left they needed to use. Told her I just got my first yesterday. Called my sister who is trying to get one, but she lives 30 minutes away and was getting her hair cut.
I wasn't in the store long, but the pharmacy lady was still trying to find someone when I left. I saw her ask one guy who bluntly replied "No and No."
Too bad you aren't close enough to Michigan. We have a huge center at Ford Field and they were putting the message out yesterday anyone who wanted a shot, no appointment needed just show up by 6. We have too many shots and can't get enough people to come and take them.Plenty of those within 25 miles too. Lake country has tons of them
Yeah I would definitely tell them about that before you get the next shot.Got my first shot of Moderna this evening and I'm wondering if I had a mild allergic reaction. About 5 minutes after the jab I felt a bit weak and lightheaded, but I couldn't tell if that was because of the shot or because I was really hungry. Got some dinner afterwards and the weakness didn't go away at all, so the vaccine seems to be the culprit. I also developed a strange burning sensation in my lungs an hour or two afterwards. Laid down for several hours and feel much better now, but this has made me a bit worried about shot #2. Maybe I'll stick around at the pharmacy for more than 15 minutes next time, just in case.
Wasn't Michigan one of the states with the higher number of COVID positives? I know it was about a week ago when they said 12 states were showing increases and Michigan was like 4th highest. There are some things that just make me really worry about the future of this country. We have people climbing all over each other trying to get a shot here, despite some earlier inaccurate posts that might lead you to believe otherwise.Too bad you aren't close enough to Michigan. We have a huge center at Ford Field and they were putting the message out yesterday anyone who wanted a shot, no appointment needed just show up by 6. We have too many shots and can't get enough people to come and take them.
First one kicked my ### too. Maybe I was one of the “no symptoms “ cases last yearFrom what I've heard/read, having the virus before often does make the reaction to the 1st shot more unpleasant. My dad was infected last fall and the first jab really beat him up.
I will happily drive to MI to get a jab. Got a link to where they were putting out announcements?Too bad you aren't close enough to Michigan. We have a huge center at Ford Field and they were putting the message out yesterday anyone who wanted a shot, no appointment needed just show up by 6. We have too many shots and can't get enough people to come and take them.
Get the first one you can unless you just want a "one and done". All the vaccines are effective at preventing severe COVID responses, so I wouldn't worry about efficacy at all. The efficacy measurements are apples to oranges anyway due to time periods, locations, demographics, etc.I become eligible next Tuesday and had signed up for a Pfizer shot at WalMart that day. Last night, I was helping someone else get an appointment and a bunch of J&J shots opened up at a different WalMart two days later. I grabbed one with the intention of canceling my Tuesday appointment, but now I'm hedging given that Pfizer is more effective. Can anyone chime in on which they would appointment they would keep?
Thanks. Single shot is certainly easier, and the time span is between 5:00 pm on Tuesday vs 8 am Thursday. Hmmm...Get the first one you can unless you just want a "one and done". All the vaccines are effective at preventing severe COVID responses, so I wouldn't worry about efficacy at all. The efficacy measurements are apples to oranges anyway due to time periods, locations, demographics, etc.
I think we are 1 or 2 right now for cases surging.Wasn't Michigan one of the states with the higher number of COVID positives? I know it was about a week ago when they said 12 states were showing increases and Michigan was like 4th highest. There are some things that just make me really worry about the future of this country. We have people climbing all over each other trying to get a shot here, despite some earlier inaccurate posts that might lead you to believe otherwise.
Unfortunately it was just a thing they blasted out because so many people didn’t show up to their appointments and they were worried the doses would spoil so they said anyone who could get their by 6, no age or job restrictions could get it. I don’t have the info but Googling Ford Field Vaccine you may be able to get an appointment. It doesn’t sound like they have been nearly as busy as they hoped.I will happily drive to MI to get a jab. Got a link to where they were putting out announcements?
Probably less work than what i have been putting in here. Every day at EOD calling pharmacies asking if they have any doses that are going to be unused. Guy told me yes, come on in, one dose available. We live one mile away. Wife got in car right away. She got there within minutes and there was a woman sitting there eating cookies and drinking water. He walked up and down the aisles asking if anybody wanted it. Gave her the dose. I mean wtf? Did he think I was joking after calling him every day?
Another time i stopped into the local grocery store pharmacy while grocery shopping and the pharmacist told me he only had one dose scheduled so far so he would have extra doses, come back at 6. So I came back at 6 and he was like oh yeah sorry used them on grocery store employees. I mean really? You didnt know you were going to do that two hours ago?
I wondered re. Kidney. I said that to my wife last night. The location is aligned...I've never had one and don't know why I'd all of a sudden get one, but who knows. Decided not to work out for a few days and see if it gets any better.jobarules said:Dull ache that doesn't go away could be a kidney infection. I had one once but the pain eventually became severe and unbearable and I had no appetite.
In your case it sounds like yard work. Or ball cancer.
Try to get on a few lists now, even if you're not eligible (yet). By the time you get an appointment, you will be eligible.Earlier this week it was rumored that my group would be opened next (yeah!) and then official news broke yesterday that eligibility is opened to anyone 16+. I guess in the grand scheme it's best to go full boar since my lifestyle choices make me least likely to transmit, but boy, that goal post feels like it got significantly farther away now that I need to get into the "everyone else" line..