Covid

From: Dave!!19 Sep 2022 20:10
To: Manthorp 6 of 10
I'm still yet to catch it (that I know of), so is the wife. Quite surprising as I've been on a few flights in the past year or so, and she's a Uni lecturer regularly surrounded by students...
From: william (WILLIAMA)19 Sep 2022 20:46
To: Manthorp 7 of 10
That sounds a bit scary. It has a bewildering range and variety of symptoms. My brother, fully vaccinated, caught it and is still having trouble getting about 4 months after testing negative. Other people have no symptoms whatsoever. There's loss of taste and smell (although to be fair I've had that with colds quite often), some people with internal organs destroyed, strokes and heart-attacks, slight sniffles and a bit of a headache, all very odd.
From: william (WILLIAMA)19 Sep 2022 20:49
To: Dave!! 8 of 10
Yes, it is very curious. I know a couple of people who haven't changed their lives at all: public transport across London every working day, even going to work during lockdown, working amongst crowds of people, and not so much as a cough.
EDITED: 20 Sep 2022 18:09 by WILLIAMA
From: milko20 Sep 2022 11:19
To: ALL9 of 10
In more "covid is weird" data, I have a friend who got long covid pretty badly, I think caught around the time of the first UK wave. Then he recently got it again and once he'd recovered from that, the lingering long covid effects seem to have gone! I'd scarcely believe it if I hadn't seen him.
EDITED: 20 Sep 2022 11:19 by MILKO
From: Matt20 Sep 2022 13:40
To: milko Rich 10 of 10
Sounds like Rich Stokoe's experience. Well, the first bit. Not sure if he's had it a second time, but I do remember him talking about the second infection long-covid "cure". He's probably running around Newcastle licking people/things trying to get infected again.

So far both Rebecca and I have avoided it, but my sister in-law Sarah and her family have recently been hit with it and Rebecca and Sarah work together in the same school, so it's only time before it turns up here.