Natter 78: I might need to watch some Buffy for inspiration
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place.
Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Y'all are much more ambitious with your shots than I am.
My 1st Shingrix shot hit me harder than I expected, although not as hard as I feared. My arm was very sore for a full week -- sore enough that I couldn't sleep on that side, and didn't want to move the arm at all if I could possibly help it.
My 2nd Shingrix shot is scheduled for Thursday the 26th. I'm hoping it won't be that bad.
Then my plan is to wait two or three weeks before I get my annual 'flu shot, wait another two or three weeks to get a Covid shot, and wait another two or three weeks before I get my first annual pneumonia shot.
Well, it's a plan. It might even work.
I still have the hot arm from Shingrix on Friday, so I'm thinking I might do covid and flu together in the other arm this Friday.
YAY SHOTS
That sucks, Jess. I don't get why companies are being so insistent on getting people back to five days a week in-person, when it's clearly not necessary.
I need to schedule my flu and Covid shots. Maybe this coming weekend, I guess. I'm trying to figure out if there's a good reason to pick either the mRNA shot or the Novavax one, or just get whatever's available.
I scheduled my appt last night but I clearly missed a final click because I never got a single text reminder. And Rite Aid loves to text me. I'll reschedule soon. There were a lot of appointments available. I'm getting both flu and Covid in the same arm. I know the combo shot they were working on was a disappointment (in that it failed to prevent either flu a or b I can't recall which) but hoping that next year it'll be a reality.
I got my COVID shot the Wednesday before Labor Day, when they first came out. I figured it wouldn’t be fully active before my trip, but at least it would be started. I’ll be getting my flu shot probably the first weekend in October.
I don't get why companies are being so insistent on getting people back to five days a week in-person, when it's clearly not necessary.
In some cases I think bosses genuinely do believe it fosters better collaboration, but in this case (ginormous multinational company with teams split across multiple offices) I think it's just a way to get people to quit so they can reduce headcount without paying severance.
I had a sucky Monday too Calli!
Short version- still feeling crappy from vaxes plus bad sleep, then flat tire, then fly in coffee.
What a difference a day makes. Feel like a human again today.
So for my study of 1 , recovery from flu+covid vax is 2 days with application of Tylenol. Arm is still a little sore, but I did preventative arm movements post shot, and whether that helped or not (who knows) it was never super sore.
I think I will try to get my vaxes on Friday. My doctor also wants me to get RSV because reasons but said to check whether insurance would cover because I don't quite meet the age rec yet.
Peeps, I am happy to report (because I know you've been waiting) that my vitamin D levels are finally in the normal range! And most of my other vitamins and stuff are normal! It's been a minute as my body has recovered from losing so much intestine with resultant malabsorption issues and we've tried to find the right supplement levels. Gold star, body and doctors!
In some cases I think bosses genuinely do believe it fosters better collaboration, but in this case (ginormous multinational company with teams split across multiple offices) I think it's just a way to get people to quit so they can reduce headcount without paying severance
And they may be right, but that doesn’t mean that you should ignore the positives (no commute means more productive work time, people with mobility/anxiety/health issues are more productive if they can take a quick break, minorities feel less “othered,” etc.)
I'm sorry everyone's Monday sucked.
I got all three because I'm behind on my 2nd Shingles shot and they were doing a flu clinic so I signed up for that and got talked into Covid. I need to start carrying hand sanitizer in my pocket again ... I mean I need to do that anyway but especially with cold and flu season and all the germs.
So I slept or was tired most of the day and then couldn't sleep at all until like 4 am. I ordered groceries to be delivered! With stuff for dinner--only 3 perishable things (ground beef, milk, yogurt)--which was good because I set them to be delivered from 11-1 pm. At least I thought I did. I picked from 9 am to 11 am. M was awake and I forgot to tell him and I went to sleep and woke up around 10 am to discover that I had selected 9 am -11 am and the groceries had been sitting outside for almost an hour, in the drizzly rain, when it's 66F outside. I got them in and proceeded to throw out the yogurt, ground beef and milk and M's mom was upset and wanted to know why I was tossing perfectly good food.
She's never had food poisoning and for some reason thinks it's not a big deal because we've gone over this before with food at unsafe temperatures.
I'm also continuing to read about Shackleton and Antarctic exploration and frankly it's amazing that more of the explorers didn't die. On Shackleton's very first trip the leader was Robert Falcon Scott who organized a trip to the literal unknown and didn't TEST OUT any of the gear before hand. Like the stoves or putting up the tents or getting into the special winter gear. The first time they did that was in the Antarctic. In a storm. Also the expedition had almost no one who had ever traveled that far south even though there were people who had experience in those waters --I think ego got in the way of that.
Almost the whole of the British Antarctic expeditions are examples of white men failing upwards.