
I’ve been hearing horror stories about the impact of the COVID vaccine on recipients.
“Everyone who got the vaccine in Western Oklahoma has had terrible side-effects,” was the word that came to me.
Allegedly, many people were hit with vertigo, among other dreadful-but-vague side effects.
My own mother, who lives in Fort Smith, Ark., also warned me of the side effects. She is 87 years old and refuses to consider receiving the COVID vaccine.
Naturally, all this side effect “news” came to me as I was preparing to receive the second dose of the Pfizer vaccine this past Wednesday, Jan. 27.
Anyway, I showed up at Mercy Hospital at the appointed time on Wednesday and within a few minutes was sharing a table with a nurse who was holding a hypodermic needle.
She told me to expect some limited reaction to the second dose before she plunged the needle with the vaccine into my arm. My body already had antibodies stirred up by the first dose, apparently.
Fast forward to Thursday. I woke up and felt as if I had been run over by a truck. Actually, it felt like the flu. Muscles and joints ached. I had zero energy. Low grade fever.
I postponed a meeting scheduled for the afternoon. I wondered if the warnings of my family naysayers were correct?
I went to bed about 8:30 that night.
However, when I awoke on Friday, all those symptoms were gone. I felt refreshed and ready to tackle my day. By afternoon, muscle aches returned, but nothing that dragged me down.
Now it is Saturday, and I’m feeling even more on top of my game.
Yes, the second dose packs a punch. But don’t panic if you awake on the day after feeling miserable.
I predict it will pass quickly, and you can resume your life confident that your odds of suffering any lasting impacts from the COVID virus are greatly reduced.
I know I am. Thank you, God (and science).