Gets it again? Do you watch the news or read the paper? Most never get it more than once.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. It means he’s more protected now. You got it over with. Congrats.Anonymous wrote:Hell no. My kid went to school one day in the last week of school and got COVID.
Until he gets it again. Idiot.
Anonymous wrote:You don’t give a ‘rat’s behind, but you responded’. I don’t know one person that’s gotten Covid more than once in 2 years, so if that happens, it’s extremely rare and it’s misleading for you to act like it’s a common thing. You’re keeping the fear going and I’ve been a rule follower the whole time.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not buying it. I know a bunch with breakthroughs and it supports exactly what scientists are telling us. It’s mild, when vaccinated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that masks and vaccines can’t protect you from covid. We have two New Years parties, a ski trip and 3 birthday parties in the next 3 weeks.
I told DH I think we should skip the new year parties. These will be 100% unmasked. I was looking forward to socializing but it just seems like a bad idea.
I also just reserved an indoor party space for my unvaccinated preschooler’s birthday. Not sure if we should go ahead or cancel.
Congrats for spreading anti-vaxxer talking points, OP!
Op here. I am not an anti vaxxer. DH and I both have gotten boosters and 2 of my 3 children are fully vaccinated. My youngest is 4 and too young to be vaccinated. We are good maskers.
All these places with 80% vaccination rates are still surging with covid cases.
I’m the one who wants to go to parties and throw parties. I’m not spreading any misinformation.
I’m wondering if other people are just saying f it and going on with life.
I was looking forward to life back to normal. For a few months, it felt normal. Now cases are higher than ever.
People are saying f it and going ok with life. They are also getting covid. From the people
I know who currently have it, which is a lot, some say it’s nothing and some are pretty sick. If you are ok with being one of the pretty sick ones them by all
Means mingle indoors with like minded people.
I know multiple households with breakthrough cases. Many are mild. Some have significant symptoms. One is a triple Pfizer vaxxed, healthy, thin man (a professional dancer) in his 30s who says he’s so grateful to be vaccinated, because “I can’t imagine feeling worse than this.”
I know it’s super convenient for you to be a denialist, but I frankly don’t give a rat’s behind whether you’re “buying it” or not.
Your friend that says it’s rough, btw is more the exception than the rule. This is you promoting fear over facts. We have exceptions to everything in life, but most of these cases are mild so assessing the risk factor, I’m not buying that we have to act like it’s 2020 with this variant.Anonymous wrote:You don’t give a ‘rat’s behind, but you responded’. I don’t know one person that’s gotten Covid more than once in 2 years, so if that happens, it’s extremely rare and it’s misleading for you to act like it’s a common thing. You’re keeping the fear going and I’ve been a rule follower the whole time.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not buying it. I know a bunch with breakthroughs and it supports exactly what scientists are telling us. It’s mild, when vaccinated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that masks and vaccines can’t protect you from covid. We have two New Years parties, a ski trip and 3 birthday parties in the next 3 weeks.
I told DH I think we should skip the new year parties. These will be 100% unmasked. I was looking forward to socializing but it just seems like a bad idea.
I also just reserved an indoor party space for my unvaccinated preschooler’s birthday. Not sure if we should go ahead or cancel.
Congrats for spreading anti-vaxxer talking points, OP!
Op here. I am not an anti vaxxer. DH and I both have gotten boosters and 2 of my 3 children are fully vaccinated. My youngest is 4 and too young to be vaccinated. We are good maskers.
All these places with 80% vaccination rates are still surging with covid cases.
I’m the one who wants to go to parties and throw parties. I’m not spreading any misinformation.
I’m wondering if other people are just saying f it and going on with life.
I was looking forward to life back to normal. For a few months, it felt normal. Now cases are higher than ever.
People are saying f it and going ok with life. They are also getting covid. From the people
I know who currently have it, which is a lot, some say it’s nothing and some are pretty sick. If you are ok with being one of the pretty sick ones them by all
Means mingle indoors with like minded people.
I know multiple households with breakthrough cases. Many are mild. Some have significant symptoms. One is a triple Pfizer vaxxed, healthy, thin man (a professional dancer) in his 30s who says he’s so grateful to be vaccinated, because “I can’t imagine feeling worse than this.”
I know it’s super convenient for you to be a denialist, but I frankly don’t give a rat’s behind whether you’re “buying it” or not.
You don’t give a ‘rat’s behind, but you responded’. I don’t know one person that’s gotten Covid more than once in 2 years, so if that happens, it’s extremely rare and it’s misleading for you to act like it’s a common thing. You’re keeping the fear going and I’ve been a rule follower the whole time.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not buying it. I know a bunch with breakthroughs and it supports exactly what scientists are telling us. It’s mild, when vaccinated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that masks and vaccines can’t protect you from covid. We have two New Years parties, a ski trip and 3 birthday parties in the next 3 weeks.
I told DH I think we should skip the new year parties. These will be 100% unmasked. I was looking forward to socializing but it just seems like a bad idea.
I also just reserved an indoor party space for my unvaccinated preschooler’s birthday. Not sure if we should go ahead or cancel.
Congrats for spreading anti-vaxxer talking points, OP!
Op here. I am not an anti vaxxer. DH and I both have gotten boosters and 2 of my 3 children are fully vaccinated. My youngest is 4 and too young to be vaccinated. We are good maskers.
All these places with 80% vaccination rates are still surging with covid cases.
I’m the one who wants to go to parties and throw parties. I’m not spreading any misinformation.
I’m wondering if other people are just saying f it and going on with life.
I was looking forward to life back to normal. For a few months, it felt normal. Now cases are higher than ever.
People are saying f it and going ok with life. They are also getting covid. From the people
I know who currently have it, which is a lot, some say it’s nothing and some are pretty sick. If you are ok with being one of the pretty sick ones them by all
Means mingle indoors with like minded people.
I know multiple households with breakthrough cases. Many are mild. Some have significant symptoms. One is a triple Pfizer vaxxed, healthy, thin man (a professional dancer) in his 30s who says he’s so grateful to be vaccinated, because “I can’t imagine feeling worse than this.”
I know it’s super convenient for you to be a denialist, but I frankly don’t give a rat’s behind whether you’re “buying it” or not.
The treatment is the vaccine. Get vaccinated and we are fine.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally fine with it. Covid is such a tiny risk to people’s health now that we have vaccines and effective treatments. I’ve been following the data closely and omicron’s hospitalization and death rates are negligible.
Except this isn’t really true. Treatment isn’t widely available. The monoclonal antibody treatment is scarce or totally out in many facilities at the moment. The pills was only just approved and only for those meeting specific criteria. It isn’t in available circulation yet. Yes we all will probably get Covid, but we don’t all need to get it at the same time. The more time that passes, the better and more accessible treatments will be, should you get a severe case.
Anonymous wrote:Good. It means he’s more protected now. You got it over with. Congrats.Anonymous wrote:Hell no. My kid went to school one day in the last week of school and got COVID.
Anonymous wrote:Not buying it. I know a bunch with breakthroughs and it supports exactly what scientists are telling us. It’s mild, when vaccinated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that masks and vaccines can’t protect you from covid. We have two New Years parties, a ski trip and 3 birthday parties in the next 3 weeks.
I told DH I think we should skip the new year parties. These will be 100% unmasked. I was looking forward to socializing but it just seems like a bad idea.
I also just reserved an indoor party space for my unvaccinated preschooler’s birthday. Not sure if we should go ahead or cancel.
Congrats for spreading anti-vaxxer talking points, OP!
Op here. I am not an anti vaxxer. DH and I both have gotten boosters and 2 of my 3 children are fully vaccinated. My youngest is 4 and too young to be vaccinated. We are good maskers.
All these places with 80% vaccination rates are still surging with covid cases.
I’m the one who wants to go to parties and throw parties. I’m not spreading any misinformation.
I’m wondering if other people are just saying f it and going on with life.
I was looking forward to life back to normal. For a few months, it felt normal. Now cases are higher than ever.
People are saying f it and going ok with life. They are also getting covid. From the people
I know who currently have it, which is a lot, some say it’s nothing and some are pretty sick. If you are ok with being one of the pretty sick ones them by all
Means mingle indoors with like minded people.
Anonymous wrote:ExactlyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Exactly. If we get it now, it’s so mild and we might as well get it now and get it over with since we will all get it eventually.Anonymous wrote:I’m boosted and just got my younger two kids vaccinated. I’m going ahead with parties now - that’s why we got vaccinated - so we could do these things.
This isn't the chicken pox. It not a one and done thing. Very uneducated and frankly silly to keep preaching the "we're all going to get it, let's get it over with" line.
Well the medical professionals say vaccinated people with no high risk conditions can decide that their risk of serious illness is low and if they feel comfortable- they can do what they want. You’re uneducated if you aren’t aware of that.
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Exactly. If we get it now, it’s so mild and we might as well get it now and get it over with since we will all get it eventually.Anonymous wrote:I’m boosted and just got my younger two kids vaccinated. I’m going ahead with parties now - that’s why we got vaccinated - so we could do these things.
This isn't the chicken pox. It not a one and done thing. Very uneducated and frankly silly to keep preaching the "we're all going to get it, let's get it over with" line.
Anonymous wrote:Go skiiing and cancel the parties. I can’t imagine who would show up at the parties right now anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Good. It means he’s more protected now. You got it over with. Congrats.Anonymous wrote:Hell no. My kid went to school one day in the last week of school and got COVID.
Anonymous wrote:Totally fine with it. Covid is such a tiny risk to people’s health now that we have vaccines and effective treatments. I’ve been following the data closely and omicron’s hospitalization and death rates are negligible.
Anonymous wrote:If Covid is going to be here forever, anyway than do we can parties every year, stop living etc? I’m just asking because lots of you tend to think we’ll just learn to live with it.
Playing cards right is hopefully getting this variant and reaching herd immunity with this milder variant. It’s no biggie and we’ll be better off to just get it and move on.Anonymous wrote:Would not go to parties. Why take a chance? I don't get why someone would be willing, if we play our cards right in a few months, hopefully Covid will be on the way out.