Thanks for posting this, Sandi.
I have had both vaccinations, and two boosters. The only one I had any kind of reaction to was the first vaccination - little reaction to the second vaccine, little reaction to either first or second boosters.
At this point in time, it is difficult to really know what it is best to do.
I have been asked if I am still doing the 'hermit thing'. I am, to some extent, because I have past lung issues, and I don't want to chance getting sick, even a little bit sick (generally speaking, I don't get "a little bit" sick, for me it is usually the whole ball of wax type sick). With my medical history, I prefer - and generally always do my best - not to get sick at all.
I have thus been chided and criticized for being "over-cautious", and that I "just need to get over it", and that I "need to get on with my life". Which is a head-scratcher. So far as I can tell, Covid is still out there, still mutating, and still infecting people in the United States at the rate of about 3 million (!) per month - and still killing about three-hundred (300) people -
every day, which makes 9,346 dead-from-Covid people per month.
Not a lot, of course, compared to what came before, but, personally, I prefer not to be one of those three hundred. It's just me, I guess.
This above is according to the Johns Hopkins Medical University Covid-19 Dashboard:
https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.htmlI did spend the 4th of July with my kids in the Bay Area; I hadn't seen them since Thanksgiving. We had a wonderful, fun time. We all tested before we got together.
That is about my extent of getting "out and about", although I do go to the grocery store about once per month, with an N95 on my face and tight-fitting goggles covering my eyes.
It is an individual choice, I guess, but it sometimes seems like people want their friends to let their guard down so that their friends can get just as sick and miserable as they were. No credence seems to be given to the fact that people are still dying from this thing.
Weird.
Anne