Anybody scheduled for vaccination yet?

@Liberty Too far from everyone! I remember while still living in Uvalde my husband telling me we were going to move to the valley and I just wept. I had heard such bad stories about the valley and was petrified of living here and moving away from my loved ones for the first time. We've been here 22 years and so far have had a nice life while living in the tropics. 😅 :LOL: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO::cry:View attachment 148259
Love the "living in the tropics" part...lol.
 

Well that wasn't made clear in your post.

I hope no one reads it without reading the replies and believes it.
It wasn't my post. I'm just pointing it out.

He said "Our 20-some grandson says that the first shot makes us immune to COVID 9-1/2 and we are now able to stand within 3 ft of other folks, rather than the previous 6 ft."

Don't you see the humor in that?
 

It wasn't my post. I'm just pointing it out.

He said "Our 20-some grandson says that the first shot makes us immune to COVID 9-1/2 and we are now able to stand within 3 ft of other folks, rather than the previous 6 ft."

Don't you see the humor in that?
Since so much misinformation is going around, no I didn't.

However if a emoji like 🤣 was added it would have been clear.
 
Me and My Husband had our first shot and our due for our second shot on March 1st. Only my husband had a sore arm for a day after the 1st shot. I didn't experience any discomfort. Today he was talking to a friend and his friend said that when anyone gets their second shot they should do it in the opposite arm. Is that true?
 
It wasn't my post. I'm just pointing it out.

He said "Our 20-some grandson says that the first shot makes us immune to COVID 9-1/2 and we are now able to stand within 3 ft of other folks, rather than the previous 6 ft."

Don't you see the humor in that?
The first time around I missed the Covid 9-1/2 instead of 19.

As has been shown numerous times with silly "if yuo cna raed thsi" memes, humans don't check every letter or character when reading. Our brains fill in the information for us.
 
The second shot is the bad one. That's what happened to me, and what most people say. Be prepared to stay home and rest the following day.
My arm didn't hurt, I just felt sick. I think the vaccine actually gives you a tiny case of covid, which produces antibodies. All I can say is, if this was a tiny case, I'd hate to get the real thing! It was much worse than the flu.

But at least I'm immune.
 
Sorry. I assumed that everyone would get the humor when I mentioned COVID 9-1/2.
Guess I should have recalled the other old joke about using the word "assume".

I'll try and keep my posts in a serious vein and leave the humor to others.
I
Nope, we need More humor! Keep posting any thing funny, just remember to add 🤣🤣🤣.

You could even tell your family about the woman who took your post seriously..I'm sure they would chuckle. 🤣🤣🤣
 
The second shot is the bad one. That's what happened to me, and what most people say. Be prepared to stay home and rest the following day.
My arm didn't hurt, I just felt sick. I think the vaccine actually gives you a tiny case of covid, which produces antibodies. All I can say is, if this was a tiny case, I'd hate to get the real thing! It was much worse than the flu.

But at least I'm immune.
No. No live virus in these vaccines.
Thanks for the warning about shot #2. As a diabetic, I also know there can be drastic changes in glucose levels.
Immune. Yay!
 
his friend said that when anyone gets their second shot they should do it in the opposite arm. Is that true?

I don't know, Sassy, and I have not seen it mentioned ANYplace, one way or the other.

BUT, I myself, had previously thought of it on my own, and decided it was good for me to do, so I plan to.
I don't think it matters to most people, but again, I have found no info on it. Just sharing my own view for myself.
 
I don't know, Sassy, and I have not seen it mentioned ANYplace, one way or the other.

BUT, I myself, had previously thought of it on my own, and decided it was good for me to do, so I plan to.
I don't think it matters to most people, but again, I have found no info on it. Just sharing my own view for myself.
I try to always get shots in my left arm because I'm right handed.
 
In the past, I usually had all mine in my left arm, because I often sleep parts of the nights, ON my right side which is sometimes too painful, for a few nights, to sleep on the side that is sore.

But I have some muscle/nerve problems, so for myself, I am planning to do the opposite arms, this time, rather than the same one, twice.
But I don't think it matters regarding the vaccine itself.

I had heard the same as Aneeda mentioned above, in general about all shots, that it's good to move the arm around, so I do that with whichever one I have a shot.
 

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