Maybe when you’re out shopping (and not monitoring them) some other member of your family is interacting with others. |
Why is this thread getting so many comments? OP hasn't declared how she is sick. Could be a headache, or food poisoning, or a rash. Who knows, OP ghosted us. |
This is probably the wildfire smoke. |
Too high up here in the DMV. Ground level air quality not showing effect, as far as I've seen. |
If its that easy I have the opposite reaction. We dont need to be more vigilant we just need to accept that it will eventually get you sick and hopefully you're one of the vast majority of people that are okay. |
I've been sick a few times since this happened. Not COVID, not allergies. Other things that can cause illness:
-- Foodborne illness (a little fecal matter on your veggies) -- Raw or undercooked food -- Bacteria or contaminants in drinking water -- Insects like flies or roaches Lots of ways to get sick. But if you are being careful with masks, etc., it's almost certainly not COVID. |
Not me. I've had 2 colds since all this started, one right when we got sent home to work in March and one last week. Congestion, slightly scratchy throat for a day, a little bit of sneezing, felt tired and foggy, temp never went over 98.9. I was worried when it started but opted to wait and see if symptoms went away and they did after a few days. Postponed grocery shopping (haven't done it yet, using up stuff in freezer). False negatives are higher in early stages of infection anyway. Also, I honestly don't know how to tell the difference between allergies and a cold, although I imagine that a cold coming on and then going away after a few days doesn't seem like allergies. I realize there are asymptomatic infections and likely there are infections with extremely mild symptoms, so it makes sense to stay away from people. I suppose if I did test positive that would provide data for contact tracers. But I would not get tested unless I had an actual fever and/or sore throat and/or cough and/or GI symptoms and/or headache, or if I had been in contact with someone who tested positive. As for the taste and smell thing, I've had that happen with colds. Nobody else in my household had any cold symptoms at all. In theory, if you are doing everything exactly right, you shouldn't catch ANYTHING, but I did. "Community spread"--meaning they don't know where someone got it--account for a huge percentage of covid infections. |
Isn't EVERYONE feeling this way these days due to fall allergies Certainly, I've been sneezing, sniffing, watery eyed this week. |
+1. My DC got very sick - major runny nose, cough, very sore throat, mildly elevated body temp but not enough to be considered “a fever”. She never had allergies before. But that’s what it definitively turned out to be. |
+1 We'd been out a parks on weeknights, sitting on the front porch, yard work, etc. with the nice weather and have as you've described above. |
We have not done anything what you have listed and we are fine. Continue to live your life. Stop blaming other people for your poor hygiene and weak immune system. Go for a run in a fresh air without mask. |
I just want to point out the flaw in this argument. Certain viruses are more contagious than others. It takes like 10 particles of norovirus to spread, for example, but others require significantly more exchange of viral particles. So even if you did pick up a virus by walking/jogging past someone, you can't jump to the conclusion that coronavirus can also be spread in that fashion. |