Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We tried to warn you to keep masking and taking precautions...hope everyone feels better soon.
Or it could be that we spent 2 years “wearing masks” and “taking precautions” (whatever that means, anyway), and our immune systems weren’t challenged at all and now we’re paying the price with all the sicknesses at once …
^^I don't really understand this really weak excuse. Most of us had covid abd it that doesn't challenge the money system then I don't know what does.
+1.
Obviously the condescending professor Minimizer will show up to tear it all apart in bad faith, but there is more scientific data on COVID dysregulating the immune system than on that 'immunity debt from too much masking' idiocy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA - get your flu shots in August. people! At least two weeks before school opens.
There is no reason to delay flu shots till October so that it can last till March. Your kids will mostly fall ill in Sept, Oct, Nov and Dec - when school opens, and when there is much holiday travelling.
It all calms down by Jan, Feb, March - because people get immunity. So, don't wait for your flu vaccine. [/
This makes no sense. Flu shots protect against one virus and it typically doesn’t start cropping up until several months into the school year. That flu shot does nothing to stop the million other cold viruses circulating. And historically, flu has not “calmed down” in Jan and Feb.
Pp again. To be clear, I think everyone should get flu shots. But doing it in august instead of October isn’t strategic and definitely does not stop people from getting worn down by other viruses.
Anonymous wrote:PSA - get your flu shots in August. people! At least two weeks before school opens.
There is no reason to delay flu shots till October so that it can last till March. Your kids will mostly fall ill in Sept, Oct, Nov and Dec - when school opens, and when there is much holiday travelling.
It all calms down by Jan, Feb, March - because people get immunity. So, don't wait for your flu vaccine. [/
This makes no sense. Flu shots protect against one virus and it typically doesn’t start cropping up until several months into the school year. That flu shot does nothing to stop the million other cold viruses circulating. And historically, flu has not “calmed down” in Jan and Feb.
Anonymous wrote:It’s the middle of October and my kids have collectively already been sick for 3 weeks straight. I’m just so worn out, the house is trashed and now I’m sick too (just weak, congested and dizzy). I’m dreading winter. It’s giving me flashbacks to Covid too where i worked at home with screaming kids all day and had no help available.
Dh and I are working together to fill in gaps but he can’t telework and I can. I haven’t been able to get any work done and things are falling apart at work. My family is immunocompromised so they can’t help. We’re running out of leave and likely won’t be able to see our families over the holidays now too. Oh and the next two Monday’s are school holidays too that we need to take off for.
Anyone else here already? Normally I only feel this way in late January or early February when I’m out of leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We tried to warn you to keep masking and taking precautions...hope everyone feels better soon.
Or it could be that we spent 2 years “wearing masks” and “taking precautions” (whatever that means, anyway), and our immune systems weren’t challenged at all and now we’re paying the price with all the sicknesses at once …
^^I don't really understand this really weak excuse. Most of us had covid abd it that doesn't challenge the money system then I don't know what does.
+1.
Obviously the condescending professor Minimizer will show up to tear it all apart in bad faith, but there is more scientific data on COVID dysregulating the immune system than on that 'immunity debt from too much masking' idiocy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We tried to warn you to keep masking and taking precautions...hope everyone feels better soon.
Or it could be that we spent 2 years “wearing masks” and “taking precautions” (whatever that means, anyway), and our immune systems weren’t challenged at all and now we’re paying the price with all the sicknesses at once …
^^I don't really understand this really weak excuse. Most of us had covid abd it that doesn't challenge the money system then I don't know what does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a baby in the house and an older preschooler and second grader. In the last 52 weeks, I have had a kid sick enough to stay home 43 of them. That included staying home from camp this summer too. I also tend to be more liberal on sending my kids to school so they aren’t staying home for just a runny nose. Name the illness and one of my kids has it. One even had chicken pox though she was vaccinated against it.
Also, I can’t attribute it to being masked up as neither of my older kids were required to mask in daycare and as someone who worked for FEMA, I was still in the office during covid.
43 full weeks/10 months of the year you’ve had sick kids at home? Or do you mean that at least one day of the week for 43 weeks of the year you’ve had sick kids?
If the former, are your kids immune-compromised or have health conditions that make them especially vulnerable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA - get your flu shots in August. people! At least two weeks before school opens.
There is no reason to delay flu shots till October so that it can last till March. Your kids will mostly fall ill in Sept, Oct, Nov and Dec - when school opens, and when there is much holiday travelling.
It all calms down by Jan, Feb, March - because people get immunity. So, don't wait for your flu vaccine.
Rounding up my kids to go to Kaiser permanente for flu shots during their limited hours is a struggle. We don’t live close. I know I should just go to CVS but it’s like $100+ for us.
So you’d rather risk getting flu than going to the trouble of getting flu shots? 🤔
Sure why not. Never gotten the flu never gotten the shot