MeDotOrg wrote: ↑Wed Feb 24, 2021 8:04 pm
Got my first dose of Pfizer today. I was very impressed with how organized they were (Kaiser San Francisco).
After you receive the shot, you're to sit for 15 minutes to see if you have any reactions.
While I was waiting, it gradually begin to sink in that I was safe, that I was going to survive. I was surprised at the elation I felt. It's like you've been living under the Covid cloud for so long, you forget what it was like to imagine life without that low-grade nagging day-to-day fear.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil.
But then I thought of a half million people that didn't get the vaccine in time. My eyes filled with tears.
I feel like I've been given a peek at what our world might feel like in the fall. Today I feel lucky and grateful. We're not at the end of Covid, but we can see the edge from here.
I so appreciate the contemplative nature of your comments above. The way you go deep inside yourself always resonates with me. Just know, that not only will you be safe and survive this pandemic, you are also contributing a blanket of protection for others. The more of us who accept vaccination, the sooner we will achieve herd immunity. Less people will succumb, more people will survive.
This fits with my lifelong principle of yanking the other guy up with us when we can. I suppose in some way, we can think of this as honoring those who succumbed by doing our level best to ensure that no one else will succumb. Oh, I know that some will contract the virus and fail to survive, but we are playing the hand we've been dealt as best we can.
Behaving in responsible ways to a public health crisis is what we all have to offer. I hope the only side effects you have are a sense of gratitude and relief!
Well done, MeDot! **tips fedora**