I had assumed that I would age with all my friends growing old around me, dying off very gradually one by one. And here was a plague that cut them off so early.
--Thom Gunn
As some of you have noted, I've been meaner than usual recently.
I'm told it's been noticeable over the last week or so on my various social media feeds.
I don't dispute that. Nor do I apologize for it -- though interestingly enough a number of people wrote to tell me they liked the new meaner Stonekettle, so there's that.
Anyway.
My increased crabbiness comes from the fact that I have COVID.
I've been fighting it for the last week or so.
Now, you might be one of those cheerful sick people, but I'm not. I feel like crap most of the time these days, a legacy of spending most of my life in a profession that tends to beat the hell out of you on a good day. Twenty years of that and, well, yeah, I feel lousy most days now. So anything that makes me feel worse isn't something I handle all that well. I'm not a good sick person. And COVID has been kicking the piss out of me for a week with the primary side effect being that it's making me even more unpleasant than usual.
Anyway, I mention it now because people have noticed and because maybe a narrative of what happened to me will help you, should you be unfortunate enough to get this crap.
First, let me say this: I don't want any advice.
REPEAT: I don't want any advice. None. Thank you.
Second, and I can not stress this enough, I don't want, need, or require any medical advice.
I have a doctor, for the moment, you're not him, thanks (and more on that subject in a minute).
I got it on the last day of my recent photography trip to Navajo lands in the Southwest with my wife. I know exactly where I got it and I know exactly who gave it to me. The relative who infected us in Las Vegas (yes, my wife got it too) didn't know they had it either, until it was too late. So, there wasn't much we could do to avoid it.
Worst part is that over the last few years since this disease first emerged, I've attended two Worldcons and a half dozen smaller cons, and if you know anything about science fiction conventions, it's a miracle I never got it before this.
One fucking day in Vegas though...
Fortunately, we left Las Vegas (not knowing yet that we'd been exposed) and drove pretty much straight home. Two days, almost all of that in the car by ourselves. And when we stopped, we were far away from others (we're not particularly social people). We still wear masks in public when appropriate. We still use hand sanitizer. And we didn't start feeling the first symptoms until we were nearly home -- literally about three hours away. So, the likelihood we may have infected anyone else along the way is fairly low. Hopefully.
We got to our home in Florida late at night. Went to bed and woke up the next morning with sore throats and coughs.
We tested right away. My wife was positive but I wasn't.
We isolated of course. Had groceries delivered, given that we'd been on the road for two weeks and there wasn't any fresh food in the house. Called everyone and told them to stay away.
That first day wasn't too bad. Mild headache. My neck and shoulders ached worse and worse as the day went by. Sneezing. Sore throat. Called my doctor and asked for Paxlovid, only to be told by the receptionist that the practice (three doctors) would not prescribe the antiviral. Beg pardon, I asked? We don't prescribe Paxlovid, she said in a tone dripping with disdain like I'd asked for a big jar of Fentanyl. Like just a blanket won't do it? Not based on patient condition? Just, no? That's right, she said. The doctor eventually called in a prescription for the sore throat, but not pax. Guess I'll be looking for a new doctor then, because that's just bullshit -- but common with conservative doctors in The South since the advent of COVID and politics-based medicine.
The next day was the worst. I slept through most of it. Fever. Body aches. By then I was testing positive. I got up around noon, had some soup, wandered out to my office to see what was going on, and ended up with chills so bad I couldn't stop shaking. I was suddenly so weak I wasn't sure I could get back to the house. I got outside my office, it was about 98F in the shade. I sat down on the pavement in my driveway, which was hot enough to burn my ass in the blazing sun, and I was wearing a huge heavy hoodie, and I was still freezing. I eventually made it back into the house, crawled into bed and buried myself under a bunch of quilts and slept for the rest of the day. And don't think I wasn't still pissed about being denied Paxlovid, because I was. And still am.
Day three was better. Still felt like I had the flu, still had a fever, but no chills. Throat was really sore and I had a persistent cough. But, I got a lot of work done that day, actually. Wrote an essay, processed a bunch of pictures from the trip. Finally ate something. You want to lose weight, I don't recommend COVID, but it does work.
Lost my sense of smell on day five.
That second day, I was ill to death, fever, chills, and the trash was full in the kitchen because we'd cleaned stuff out the fridge when we got home. I pulled the bag out, but I wasn't walking out to the road and trashcans.
So I tossed it into the garage.
And I forgot about it.
It's a 100F here.
I forget about it for a couple of days.
My wife eventually went out to the garage for something and I hear her retching, OMG SOMETHING DIED OUT HERE!
I'm like, really? I don't smell anything.
She looked at me, seriously? You don't smell that? Gag. Something must have gotten in here and died.
I looked at the beagle, the beagle looked at me. And even he was wrinkling up his nose in disgust and it takes a lot to disgust a beagle. Trust me.
That's when I remembered that trash bag from the kitchen.
The one that might have had some raw shrimp in it. And had been sitting in the heat for days.
Ooooh! The light came on.
Hey, I've lost my sense of smell! That's not great, but from your expression it is convenient! I'll get that garbage out to the cans now. Sorry.
It's weird. I can taste certain things, but not others.
I can't really smell much of anything.
Coffee? I can smell that. And taste it too. And it tastes as great as it always does to me. No problem. But fruit juice? Might as well be cold water. I don't know. I had some pizza last night and it tasted fine. I bleached the hell out of the kitchen and the garbage cans. Nothing. Couldn't smell any of it. Which was, again, convenient. So, there's that. But then it's Florida. This place mostly smells like cancer from the paper plant and moldy swamp water. Who wants to smell anything anyway, amiright?
I'm told I'll get taste and smell back in a few weeks or so.
We'll see. I not in any hurry. Especially since I'm the one who has to take out the trash in this horrible heat.
Over the rest of the week, I wrote another essay. Processed more pictures from the trip. Wrote a bunch of social media posts. Rewatched The Mandalorian and the Book of Boba Fett. Watched Trump get indicted again and watched Elon Musk continue to destroy a $40 billion platform with all the finesse of that armed chimp in the movie Nope. I mowed the grass, or an acre of it anyway. The pasture can wait another week. I'm feeling better, still got that cough though. Still isolating. Still testing positive. Still a little tired.
It's the first time I've gotten it.
Hope it's the last, but it probably won't be given that the disease is endemic now.
I'm fully vaccinated and have received all the boosters and, yeah, I still got it. But it was mild, I didn't die, didn't end up in the hospital with a tube shoved down my throat, hopefully won't have any long term complications. That's how vaccines work.
I'm still pissed about not getting the Paxlovid.
But, really, for me, the worst part about having COVID is that I can't see my 8-month-old grandson for a few more weeks.
That blows.
Though my lovely daughter-in-law is a sending me pictures nearly every day and Facetiming the good stuff.
Getting old sucks, so does COVID. But being a granddad makes up for a lot.
I am stunned and outraged that any medical practice would deny you Paxlovid. That should be malpractice!!!!!
ReplyDeleteTotally agree - denying a patient a drug known to ameliorate symptoms and reduce risk especially with pre-existing conditions is malpractice.
DeleteGet used to it. Doctors, especially in the reich-wing states, will no longer be bound by the Hippocratic oath to save patients, but will be allowed to use "religious convictions" as a way to impose their religion on patients. It starts with not prescribing certain drugs, then it will move to not treating gay people or trans people, and finally ignoring women and people of color.
DeleteI have to agree. No doctor should deny a patient treatment. Disgraceful behavior.
DeleteJust curious but couldn't you get it from the nearest VA Clinic/Hospital?
DeleteI’m stunned and sorry that they denied you Pax. God - where I am you just call your doc, say “COVID” and they say “I’ll call in Pax right away.”
DeleteAnd it helps.
I can’t imagine a medical professional denying a proven treatment to a suffering patient … that’s ghastly.
My son lives in California. He was exposed by a friend who had just flown in from Germany. He called his doctor, who wasn’t in. He is on California’s version of Medicare. The receptionist took his information and Paxlovid appeared. Bless CalMed.
Delete“but will be allowed to use "religious convictions" as a way to impose their religion on patients.” And their religion is Trump.
DeleteWhat an awful way to learn that your doctor is an insufferable asshole!
DeleteParallel universe here - at the tail end of Covid, and can’t go near my sweet 9 month grandson. Second time in six months for me, both times from out of town guests who seemed to pick it up on the flight here. Had to bring my friend to the ER briefly for help (days before I got symptoms and tested positive) and the doctor there said they weren’t seeing much assistance from Paxlovid these days, but when my friend mumbled he wanted it, the doctor sent it in right away.
DeleteKJL, please tell me you understand that no doctor is or ever has been bound by the Hippocratic Oath. That nonsense isn't binding. It's an ideal, not a law or a contract.
DeleteAbsolutely ridiculous a doctor wouldn’t prescribe a medicine like that. As pro-choice as I am, if a doctor doesn’t want to provide an abortion, fine, but a treatment for an illness? Insanity.
DeleteDamn, Jim, that sucks. I hope you get smell and taste back pronto. Given your fabulous cooking skills, that's important. Hoping your wife is doing okay, too.
ReplyDeleteReading about this makes me even more glad than usual that I'm a semi-hermit and mask up in any public places. I'm too old for that crap.
Be as crabby as you want to be -- heck, some of your best stuff comes roaring out as rants, sir.
I have not yet had covid; but I have become lax in masking up.
DeleteNoticing what is going on in my personal universe, both physical and digital, I think I will re-start.
Oh, by the way, that anonymous comment, including being a semi-hermit and masking, was me! Not a troll, sir.
ReplyDelete"NO COMMENTS":
ReplyDelete"POST A COMMENT"
THIS IS A TRAP!
He said he didn’t need or want ADVICE. That’s different than comments.
DeleteHealth to you.
ReplyDeleteReally sorry they wouldn’t give you Paxlovid. Glad you’re feeling better. Best wishes on finding a sane new doctor . Thanks for reminding me why I don’t want to get on an airplane and go to a wedding in Tampa .
ReplyDeleteI have had it twice. Not sure where I picked it up the first time, but the second time was on a Caribbean cruise. Both times symptoms were mild. Aches, sore throat and a cough. Fully vaxxed and boosted, so I avoided serious symptoms. I hope you feel better soon. And find a doctor who will give you the paxlovid!
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry Covid finally caught up with you. Just thought I would share a doctor's name - I see Dr. Kevin Jones from Internal Medicine at the Medical Center Clinic on Davis in Pensacola (by HCA/ West Florida Hospital) and he was more than happy to send in a Paxlovid prescription for me when I had Covid last year. Hope you and your wife continue to feel better with no lingering after effects.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the being a granddad!
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry you got COVID, Jim, but am glad you're on the mend. I hope you and your wife continue to get better. Fingers crossed you can find a less assinine doctor!
ReplyDeleteYou sound like a person who is VERY VERY concerned about not giving COVID to other people, even strangers, so you don’t sound mean to me. Thank you, as always, for your good citizenship.
ReplyDeleteYou really have been through a lot (and your wife, too). I am so sorry for you both (with COVID). I am thankful you are looking for another doctor!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes for a full recovery and good health ahead.
ReplyDeleteI am flabbergasted and just as angry as you that your doctor refused to prescribe Plaxovid. That stuff is the bomb.
ReplyDeleteAhhh, if only you'd asked for some Ivermectin and bleach, with a UVB lightbulb chaser, I'm sure they would have served those up to you gratis. Glad you're feeling somewhat better, and thank you for the garbage/Beagle imagery. I've had something similar happen, and yep, when the dog thinks it's bad, it's BAD. Gotta admit, the whole beginning part of the story really reminded me of the opening chapters of The Stand. ;-)
ReplyDeleteIndeed it did. Had nightmares for a year about it.
DeleteHad it before vaccine introduced. Wine tasted awful, but brown and white liquor (thank god) was fine. Cilantro tasted like used motor oil... one leaf ruined a salad. Took me 11 months to get smell and taste back to normal.
ReplyDeleteThat’s what cilantro ALWAYS tastes like to me
DeleteI’ve found people either love or hate cilantro. Have been told it is a genetic thing but have not researched that for accuracy.
DeleteBless your DIL
ReplyDeleteI got it about the same time you did. My Wife gave it to me and our Daughter gave it to her. We have pretty much the same symptoms and she still has the cough. I'm really glad I'm not the only one. It was our first time too. Get better, it's going to be another week or two, I suspect.
ReplyDeleteGlad you are feeling better. Grandkids are great. I hope you get to see him soon.
ReplyDeleteI am glad you are on the mend and pissed that the Paxlovid was not prescribed for you. It makes no damned sense and this comes from over 40 years as an RN. No advice from me, I promise.You don't need it.
ReplyDeleteI love reading about your joy at being a granddad. It warms my heart and that is no easy task, since I've become a mix of Maxine, Gladys Kravitz and Bernie Sanders in my old age. Take care Jim. You are appreciated and your minions adore you.
Best wishes for a full and speedy recovery for you both!
ReplyDeleteGrrrrr. I'm sure if you'd asked for Ivermectin with a bleach chaser, they would have served it up gratis, and thrown in a free UVB bulb as a bonus. Glad to hear you are feeling better, though. It's annoying as all get out to feel so damned FEEBLE, isn't it? As for the Beagle/garbage thing, I had to laugh, because I've gone through the same scenario, and yep, when the dog thinks it's bad, it's BAD!
ReplyDeleteGrandbabies are the best! Get well soon.
ReplyDeleteFeel
ReplyDeletebetter soon.
Get well soon.
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry you are sick .. but glad you are getting better.
ReplyDeleteI believe that any doctor who refuses to give ya Paxlovid should be sued for Malpractice. The very idea makes me feel ill. Covid kills people. So far I have not had Covid either .. being in my 70's .. I am relieved to know Paxlovid exists .. but living in NC .. I am praying they would give it to me if I needed it. I just went last Sunday to get my latest Covid booster shot.
Mostly true. When we got it my wife got Pax and I didn't - bad interaction with my asthma med.
DeleteWe had gotten our last vax shot a week before last Christmas. My husband went into the hospital 12/20 for some minor surgery and by Thursday tested + (if you wanna get sick, go to a hospital). I got to wait until Christmas day to test +. Got Paxlovid that Monday and did the routine. Was fine for New Years, which is when we celebrated Christmas with family, only to test + again that Monday! (I was told that might happen). Luckily no one else got sick and both times were more like a mild head cold for me. Now I get a runny nose whenever I eat and I don't know if it's from the vax, Covid or Paxlovid. All that to say maybe it's a good thing they didn't prescribe it :D
ReplyDeleteThe runny nose business happens to us old peoples. I hated sitting at the adult table for holiday meals as it turned into the Nose Blow Concerto between "pass the mashed potatoes" and "where's the pumpkin pie."
Delete: )
DeleteI just got back from a Canadian rocky mountain journey and same thing, Covid symptoms on the way home. Dang Covid is on the rise again. Wishing you and your wife speedy recovery.
ReplyDeleteI'm so sorry, Jim. Getting COVID in the South super-sucks. I wish that the best of scientific medicine had actually been deployed on your behalf. 🤬
ReplyDeleteCongratulations! You've lived to die another day. Thank Cthulu I had the good fortune to leave Paper Mill City (across Mobile swamp) 8 years ago for the cool side of the our star here in the Valley of the Sun.
ReplyDeleteAs one of the Moody Blues once wrote, "Cantankerous Is The Best Way to Travel". Or something close. Stay irascible.
That sucks, so freaking hard. I've had minor cases a couple times, but thankfully I haven't lost my sense of smell. May you and your lady wife continue to recover, and all be well. Also, congrats on the grandkid. May the child be blessed with happiness, joy, peace, health, and abundance.
ReplyDeleteI manifested all the symptoms on the way home from a 4th of July party on 7/2. Suspect I caught it from my coworker, an antivaxer who came to work sick without telling anyone. Had the worst chills I can remember for about 6 hours then just felt like a mild case of leftover flu for about a week. Fully vaccinated, boosted, and have had a couple of really mild cases early in the outbreak despite following all protocols. Taste is now out of whack. Glad you’re feeling a little better. I am not enjoying getting old. (66)
ReplyDeleteThat sucks so much, I'm sorry you both got it. We had it a year ago, and my parents both got it separately this year. Trying to get the Paxlovid through Kaiser was a freaking maze, and they never did actually get it. Hopefully you find a sane doctor soon.
ReplyDeleteMy wife and I just had it for the first time, and my experience was similar to yours. I did get Paxlovid (I'm high risk for serious complications), but a couple of the side effects are nothing to take lightly. Immediately following my negative COVID test, I got a significant kidney infection (likely tied to one of the Paxlovid side effects), and I'm finally recovering from that. Fully vaxxed and boosted, which is probably why I didn't end up in the hospital as well. Lost a couple of weeks of my life, but better than losing my life. I hope your recovery goes fast!
ReplyDeleteJust want to wish you and your wife well. (Signing in via my Google account (through YouTube?!) did not work.) Admire how you can make even this series of events entertaining,
ReplyDeleteI am an MD and have prescribed Paxlovid for my patients. There is some data that the Paxlovid actually makes some things worse but I am not sure that is why your doctors said no. My son gave me covid (all the while seeing sick people every day in my office) and I got sick just as I was entering Florida. Couldn't get a test anywhere there but tested positive when I came home. My husband didn't get covid until this year but he seems to have residual symptoms that would qualify as "long Covid". I was lucky and had a relatively mild case. There was no Paxlovid when I had covd. Hope you heal soon.
ReplyDeleteFeel better soon. Just getting over my bout with COVID. First time for me too. Also got it on my last day of vacation. Slowly getting back into the gym routine. Take slow, my friend. Even with the Paxlovid, it's been difficult to get back to 100 percent.
ReplyDeleteI cannot, MUST NOT get this virus. Not going into details, but there's an extremely valid reason why not. It rhymes with "death". So I wear a mask everywhere I go in public settings. It's table stakes for me. I get weird looks and an occasional comment. One guy decided to make me his mission and followed me around. Told me that it wasn't necessary anymore. I had enough and said to him "Look, you lot were so up in arms about "FREEDOM" and now won't let me engage in my own free choice. F*CK OFF!" He left in a huff.
ReplyDeleteThis ain't over. This ain't even close to being over.
Good for you telling him off! And best of luck avoiding Covid.
DeleteBRAVO!
DeleteWell done!
DeleteGet well soon! Mind blown about the Paxlovid. 🤯 I’m sorry you don’t get to see your grandson right now. Your photographs from your recent trip are stunning, though, so there’s that.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you're feeling better, despite that jerk of a doctor denying you treatment. All the best to your family (and the beagle)!
ReplyDeleteDang Jim! Glad you're on the mend hope wife and the relative are feeling better as well. I got it in 2021 and it was like a mild cold, barely registered, but I continued to get vaxed anyway. Definiitely the worst part is not being able to see the Grands! Thankfully there is the technology to "see" them. For the beagles sake I hope you get your smeller back soon.
ReplyDeleteI get you on the last bit especially. I have a trip coming up to visit with my 88-year-old Dad and my immunocompromised sister. My husband is flying out from Oklahoma to join us.
ReplyDeleteAm I stocked up on COVID test kits? Damn right.
Hope you and your white get better soon. Keep up the good fight sir. Thank you for being a voice of sanity to us. We appreciate it greatly
ReplyDeleteWon’t let me sign in, but best wishes for a rapid recovery and an avoidance of long COVID (the risk for which would have been lessened by Paxlovid). Also, best of luck find a new physician who actually practices medicine. What a pain in the ass.
ReplyDeleteMichael
Glad you're on the mend. I was very fortunate to have a very mild case in October 2022 (first time having it, got infected 3 days after receiving the Omicron booster).
ReplyDeleteHope it is short. The second time I had it was after I was vaccinated and it was much easier to get through and recover. I hope it's the same for you.
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear you lost your Covidginity. Beams for quick and full recovery!
ReplyDeleteI’m grinding my way through it now. Hope you get better soon!
ReplyDeleteHang in there, brother. Glad you'e feeling better, but you're not going to go all nice on us now, are you? Some of us kinda liked the newer, meaner you.
ReplyDeleteJim, I’m so sorry that crap caught up with you! Hope you feel better and have all your senses in good working order, soon!
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear about the plague catching up to you and your wife. Given your FL location, I'm surprised the doc didn't try to push Ivermectin on you. I hope you both recover as quickly as possible and that you get your sense of smell back too. Take care of yourself so you can see the grands in person.
ReplyDeleteSorry you got that Covid crap Jim as if your writing needed any polishing...it did not by the way!
ReplyDeleteCongrats being a grand dad and your ma a great grand mother❤️
That just sucks, Jim.
ReplyDeleteI'm 65 and mildly immune-suppressed. My wife is severely immune-suppressed. We were exposed on a Saturday, by a very nice lady (professional organizer) who was helping us pack and purge to move to a new (to us) house. She'd been exposed on Friday (by family) and didn't yet know she was sick. She called us on Sunday to let us know, but it was already evident that we were both pretty sick.
Monday morning we took at-home COVID tests, and we were both -solidly- positive. We called our PCP, who just about shouted when I told her what my pulse ox was (91%). She said 90% is the threshold for going to COVID ICU, and -immediately- prescribed Paxlovid for both of us. We got it and took it that afternoon, and went to bed, feeling like hammered dog poop.
It took about a week, but we both recovered. This was June of last year. We're -still- dealing with "long COVID" issues (such as persistent brain fog, occasional vertigo, smell/taste issues, difficulty sleeping). But we're still on this side of the grass, so there's that.
Long story short: it sounds like you dodged a bullet. My wife and I are very grateful, and wish you and your wife a full and speedy recovery. Much love to all in your house (including the beagle, of course!).
Well, damn! What a hell of a way to find out that your doctor is an ass.
ReplyDeleteI know everyone will be glad when you're smelling better!
Wait, that didn't come out right, did it?
We'll let it stand.
Onward and upward, kiddo.
Damn bad luck. My hopes for a solid recovery, ASAP, for you both. My case was extremely mild, sucks to hear about harsher cases.
ReplyDeleteYour pics over your trip to the southwest are inspiring, that’s a trip I hope to take myself, sooner rather than later!
Best, Andy
Well, I LOVED your latest posts and some even had me laughing. So thanks for that, but sorry to hear of your COVID. Glad you are on the mend.
ReplyDeleteYou had a strong case for a vaxxed person. I hope you heal completely soon.
ReplyDeleteUgh, Covid. I go to one Con a year(masked the whole time)and that's when I got it, in June. Got it from someone that wasn't sick on the day so they didn't know. First time here, also. Asked for and received the second anti-viral, molnupiravin. Pretty sure it helped lessen the symptoms but it has side effects that aren't cool. Maybe you dodged a bullet. Then got food poisoning(no smell) it was an ugly month. Feeling much better now and wishing that for you both, also. Pat the beagle, life is better with the hairy 4-feet.
ReplyDeleteDang! I love giving unsolicited advice, too bad you nipped that bud. However, I wish you and your wife a speedy full recovery and continued coffee friendly taster.
ReplyDeleteGlad you are on the mend. That doctor needs to be sued for malpractice 😡
ReplyDeleteSucks to be sick, especially as seriously as you have been. Glad you're on the mend but your doc is a putz for making it worse than it had to be. I've been fortunate that I've yet to get that. Fingers continue to be crossed.
ReplyDeleteChief, you have my sympathy. Thank goodness you can taste coffee, but damn all the rest.
ReplyDeleteI'm still trying to wrap my head around a doctor refusing to prescribe Paxlovid. That's just medical malpractice. The Florida I lived in 50 years ago, which was no great bargain even then, seems like a sane and rational place compared to DeSantisLand.
ReplyDeleteGet better soon, getting this damn thing sucks.
Ugh got those chills with my first vax. They are murder. I felt like my “frozen” bones were going to break from the shivering under 4 quilts, wrapped in a fleece pj & robe with a hat and gloves. I commiserate. I hope your taste comes back soon.
ReplyDeleteDamn, Jim, sorry you had to get such a dumbass doctor! My wife, the just-retired MD, reacted to that guy with an “Are you f*cking kidding?”. Good luck in getting all your senses back, it can take a while.
ReplyDeleteBeing grandad is the bomb. As grandpa I have 4 jobs, play with the kid, give her sugar, give her money and then send her home.
ReplyDeleteLife is good.
Sorry you’re feeling like crap, Jim. While understanding how (partially) losing your sense of smell can be advantageous I confess it would drive me batty. Hope you find a new doc that cares more about people than politics, and that you bounce back to your “normal” feeling lousy soonest.
ReplyDeleteGetting COVID sucks. Caught it last summer and it knocked me on my ass. Recovery took a lot longer than advertised.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, glad you can smell coffee. It’s the best aroma 😊
And you were harsher than normal? I must be jaded as didn’t notice. Thought you were accurately capturing our collective mood.
Extremely glad to hear you are on the mend. Snorted at the mention of if the beagle thinks it's bad, it's REALLY bad! At least you returned with absolutely stunning photos.
ReplyDeleteIf that was my doctor, I would not be his patient.
ReplyDeleteSome doctor.
Ouch. I finally caught COVID this spring and had hardly any symptoms, except that I produced so much mucus, I had to sleep sitting up or drown. I'm guessing that was a different strain. I'm scheduling a booster before winter just in case the one you caught becomes prevalent.
ReplyDeleteyour stages of sick mirrored mine - which happened PRE Vaccines in 21. however it took me SIX MONTHS to get taste and smell working again.
ReplyDeleteIsn't being a grandparent just the best??? Hope you get to see your little guy soon. My own grandson is turning 19(!!!) soon. Man, it goes fast. Suck up every single minute of it you can!
ReplyDeleteI hate your doctor. I'm glad you're getting better, and happy you can smell your beloved coffee.
ReplyDeleteI still haven't contracted COVID. At 70 years old, I'm glad.
So sorry. I'd be furious not to get the Paxlovid. "Politics-based" medicine is a plague. Hope you feel better soon!
ReplyDeleteYour story reminds me of the time in the 80’s when I car pooled with a woman who forgot a takeout container of shrimp in her car over the weekend. The smell lingered for months!
ReplyDeleteCOVID sucks and that doctor is a moron. Hope you heal quickly and completely.
ReplyDeleteHad a similar experience last year, doctor said no also. Being a hard-headed 67 year old male with COPD and diabetes I called a few urgent care clinics until I found one that would. I am glad I did, only went thru 2 days of misery and not being able to breathe. Day 5 negative test...
ReplyDeleteBut on the positive side, you can smell and taste coffee and it smells and tastes good proving there is a god. Of coffee.
ReplyDeleteHere in the limp-wristed leftie Seattle area, a friend returned from a long road trip upon which he caught the ‘Rona. He called his local primary care clinic - they immediately ordered Paxlovid, which I went a half-mile down the road to pick up for him. End of story. (it’s not a miracle drug, he’s still sick, but a lot less so).
ReplyDeleteDid your doctor and his staff offer to come an pray away the Covid?
ReplyDeleteSheesh Feel better, that's all I got.
ReplyDeleteSounds lord-have-mercy miserable, hope you're getting back to whatever normal looks like soon.
So denying medication can be considered like a religious belief, like a Catholic doctor refusing to provide an abortion??
ReplyDeleteI won’t provide Paxlovid because it’s against my beliefs??
What
The
Actual
Fuck?
Get well soon.
That totally sucks, Jim. I hope you and the Mrs. recover quickly and fully.
ReplyDeleteOh, and your comment on it taking a lot to disgust a Beagle is absolutely spot on!
Quite the narrative. I still mask, slightly relaxed my social bubble, putting off getting it as long as I can. Silver lining I suppose on not smelling the various putrefactions. Thanks for the art (photography, writing, musings).
ReplyDeleteJim, I got shingles 2 months after covid. There are studies that show there could be a relationship. Just saying I wish I had gotten that vaccine too. You probably aren't old enough to worry about it.
ReplyDeleteHad shingles, got the vaccine ($270 for the jab, paid it gladly). Got it again, apparently the original vaccine was only 50% effective. Got the jab a second time, freeze that time. Good friend got the vaccine because I had botched so much . Shingles is not a fun time.
DeleteI'm so sorry you got COVID and outraged that your doctor's office refused to prescribe Paxlovid. And I'm in awe of how much you have done while being and feeling so ill.
ReplyDeleteOur household managed to evade COVID until 4 weeks ago when my fully vaxxed and boosted hubby caught it at an outdoor pool party. He never got in the pool and stayed on the periphery. And he still got it. He isolated at home and was able to get Paxlovid the next day (in Texas). Our fear was that I would get it. I'm in treatment for follicular lymphoma. Catching covid would be a rotten turn events for me. But we isolated and wiped down every surface and door knob and yelled when we were about to got into a room where the other person might be. It was so weird. But hubby recovered well and within 2 weeks was back to riding 30 miles on his bike. We were lucky this wasn't an earlier variant.
ReplyDeleteSending good vibes for swifter recovery and a pox on that doctor for denying you Paxlovid.
Perhaps one of us followers could obtain some Paxlovid on a sneaky pretense through their own medical provider and then send to you.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea how you kept your cool on the Paxlovid. Guess I better update my booster to the booster of the last booster or whatever. Getting Covid could kill me. and only you could make me laugh in the middle all that serious shit with the garbage in 100 degree heat and not being able to smell. Thank you Jim.
ReplyDeleteI feel ya, Chief. I came home from South Dakota with COVID. The difference is that I live in Colorado and VA Health Care prescribed Paxlovid right away.
ReplyDeleteIt is completely nuts that doctors in the south won't prescribe Paxlovid.
ReplyDeleteFor contrast, when I got COVID in Massachusetts a few months ago the PA in my doctor's office immediately suggested Paxlovid. My doctor realized that I was taking a medication that might interact with Paxlovid in a less than great way and switched the plan to remdesvir, which is given by a series of I/V infusions. But rather than force me to come to the hospital or infusion center and risk spreading the infection, the hospital sent an EMT to my house on three consecutive days to do the infusions at home.
It's incredible to me that some parts of the country can be so completely different, and so completely backward.
But I'm glad you and your wife are okay, Jim.
I got it in June at an outdoor luncheon, the difference being that at least in Kentucky, the Urgent Care will call in the Pax scrip if you test positive in their office, thank all the old gods. It did make a big difference; here’s hoping you find a better doc.
ReplyDeleteI just got it for the first time, too -- probably on the plane from Mpls to Sea, despite masking 100% of the trip, not even taking it off to drink. And I was sick as a *dog* except no fever. Bone rattling cough, fountaining nose, diarrhea, chills, sweats, and capital F fatigue. Never been that sick in my life. My nurse friend says she hopes she lives long enough to understand why some folks walk away whistling Dixie and other folks are laid low for days to weeks. Hope you're on the mend by now, sir, and that the garage has aired out.
ReplyDeleteStill ducking and dodging, up to date on vaccinations, masked up in crowds and recognize the Covid will visit sooner or later, tap me on the shoulder and say “tag, your it”
ReplyDeleteBe well
my primary didn't even want me to come into the office and told me to go to urgent care. I did and told them I wanted Paxlovid. Got the script...problem was my pharmacy at Publix didn't have it and couldn't fill it so I had to search other pharmacies and finally found it at Walgreens...Worked like a charm, terrible taste in my mouth for 5 days...but I only tested positive for 10 days...day 11 I was negative. I am fully vaxed and boosted. I got it 5 days after Thanksgiving last year. Felt like the flu...only had symptoms for 3 days...but I still am coughing.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear you are surviving. I still haven't caught it and hope never to catch it.
ReplyDeleteWishing you and your wife a speedy recovery!
ReplyDeleteHad my 6 monthly doctor visit last week.
ReplyDeleteWe talked about the new covid strain and vaccinations/boosters etc. He told told me to call the office and he would prescribe Paxlovid if I contact covid. There are some sane people in the south, even in Texas !
Cripes, thanks for that rollercoastet of an essay.
ReplyDeleteGlad you're doing better. That kid's got some good grandpa stuff to look forward to.
I guess do no harm = don’t do anything. Get better soon Jjm!
ReplyDeleteWhooof. I propose to commiserate, albeit belatedly.
ReplyDeleteI got COVID Last December 26th while sitting in an airport, during a blizzard. I had to get home because my basement had flooded and a needed to get the mitigation process started. The flight got cancelled. I was stuck there overnight. By the time I got home, the symptoms had started and I was trying to clean out my frozen flooded basement with a fever and chills.
So what I'm saying is I empathize with your misery.
Oof. Sorry you got caught by the bug. I :::knocks wood emphatically::: have been fortunate enough to avoid it thus far, and your post has nudged me out of my lax mask-wearing practices--my husband and I are the nearest things to actual hermits, but sometimes I still have to go out into creation, and I'd gotten slack with my masking lately.
ReplyDeleteNot a COVID-related story, but your garbage bag with raw shrimp reminded me of a charming experience of my own...About 2 years ago, I was caregiving for my mom at her home 4 days a week. My routine involved stopping for groceries, then heading to her house.
One August week, I decided to make an appointment to have my car worked on while I was staying at Mom's--she couldn't be left alone, so there was no need to have the car nearby. I went and got the groceries, dropped them off at the house, dropped off the car, and caught an Uber back to Mom's.
Four days later, I went to pick up the car. It had been an extremely warm week, even for Chicago in August. I walked into the lot with the keys, and as I walked around to put my belongings in the trunk, I noticed--from a few feet away--that there seemed to be an awful lot of flies who were AWFULLY interested in my car for some reason.
I opened the trunk--foolish child that I am!--and was walloped in the olfactories by the most corrosive, gut-wrenching, nostril-obliterating DEATH REEK I had ever experienced. I mean, I've cleaned some vile catboxes in my day; I've dealt with dumpster juice sitting in the bottom of a trash barrel after weeks of marinating on hot alley pavement, I've even moved dead skunks...this, though, was a whole 'nother level.
In the trunk, the culprit--still mercifully in a small plastic bag--was the value pack of chicken breasts--the ones I had assumed, when they were missing from the grocery order, that I'd forgotten at the store. They'd apparently slipped out of the larger bag and mixed in with my usual trunk-junk, concealing themselves just well enough to escape my notice.
The stench had permeated the entire car. I drove home with all the windows opening and the A/C blasting, trying to drive off the miasma, but it took a week or more before the car was habitable.
If you want to discuss bad smells, try 4 day old crayfish heads in Louisiana heat.
DeleteThis is pretty much how we got COVID last spring. We were on a Rhine River cruise and got overconfident about masking at the dinner table because it was a small ship and the other six people at our table had all been vaccinated and we were told they were being cautious otherwise. Then on the final night one of them happened to mention that she'd had what she assumed was a cold for the last few days.
ReplyDeleteWe asked her if she had done a COVID test and she said she didn't bring any test kits and was sure it was a cold. We gave one of ours and the other three people she was traveling with agreed with us that she should go back to her cabin and test forthwith.
About 20 minutes later the chief steward came back, took away her plate, and said she wouldn't be returning for the rest of the dinner because she had tested positive.
We're still kind of annoyed about her.
By the time we got home we both had it. My case was extremely mild (I've had colds that were worse). My wife felt worse and spent the next week lying around on the sofa, but her symptoms weren't that bad aside from the fatigue. We both made full recoveries. We were lucky but we are now more careful than we were. We have no desire to roll those particular dice again at our age.
I'm sorry to hear you finally caught it, or it caught you. I've had it twice now, in July 2021, and in July 2023, exactly two years to the day later. I've learned to hate July 20. I'm sure that being fully vaxxed saved my life the first time around. Your sense of smell and full sense of taste could come back at any time, but may come and go for a while as it returns. I found that most of the time even when I could smell nothing and most foods had no flavor, I could taste straight sugar and straight salt. So I salted and/or sugared everything for a while. The cough may be with you for several months. Make friends with it and get to know it well so you can give it things that it likes.
ReplyDelete(Darrell Markewitz) : A bit of a social commentary.
ReplyDeleteI quickly ran down dozens of comments.
Not a single nay sayer. Not One...
Curious? It may be that Jim's audience has firmly pushed more to the Left as he has become more critical of the Orange Disaster and Ultra Right politics of the USA (hey, I'm a Canadian).
Like you Jim, I'm an artisan maker, already isolated for my craft. Fully vaccinated, still mask outside home, stay the hell out of cities.
I just got my 5th combo shot last week, as I am taking my first air travel (Ireland and Scotland) since 2017 - in 3 days. You can bet I will be fully masking on all the many planes, buses and trains over the next three weeks. Your tale (as so often) is a parable of warning. Only a fool thinks this is over, and as a senior with work related lung damage, I am disgusted by a culture that thinks it remains fine to sacrifice the old for the mere convenience and blind wishful thinking of the young.
Get and stay well Jim, as a culture we need your observations.
I had the same thing happen to me back in April, Wife first then me, my Doctor was able provide Paxlovid, I still had 5 days of sickness until I was not sick any more.
ReplyDeleteon the plus side, of all the communicable diseases one could pick up in Vegas, could have been worse. badump tss. A physician refusing to prescribe an antiviral specifically requested by a patient? No explanation? Just a "no"? Yeah, i think i would be looking for another one too. After having a sincere "heart to heart discussion" with the current. In person. Face to face. With the door locked. One good thing about the VA, if i call in and tell them i need xxxx called in, it is on its way by the next day.
ReplyDeleteI'm so sorry to hear of this. I don't know anyone who coasted through COVID without being absolutely miserable. Either I got it and had no symptoms or am the last person in the US to get it. Fully vaccinated, like you.
ReplyDeleteIf my doctor refused me antiviral care I'd (a) get a new doctor ASAP and (b) report another one to the local medical licensing board. That's terrible.
I have a friend who just came down with Covid in the hospital after surgery (best place to pick up an infection, after all) and he was stared on an antiviral immediately and rushed into a quarantine.
May you and your dear wife feel better soon. May the garage air out in time. At least you know you can smell, although what a way to find out!
My daughter decided to move out because she didn't want to risk infecting me, and her workplace was definitely exposing her. She masks pretty well, but nobody else does, and sometimes it gets pretty thick. Then her flatmates gave it to her. I'm still a Novid but the risk is increasing.
ReplyDeleteThe symptom free transmission is what gets people. The Hospitals refusing to test for it gets people too. I'd think you should have a good case for malpractice against your former MD, but probably not in Florida.
My feeling about this is that it borders on being a population reduction measure. I have that feeling because the science is clear and the actions of governments around the world clearly ignore it. Don't care how it started, but it looks like they've seized on it as a way to get rid of the inconvenient older folks.
We don't see the precautions taken around the wealthy (We did at Davos).
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2023/01/20/world-economic-forum-is-taking-all-these-covid-19-precautions-at-davos/?sh=76ceddd46304
Particularly in the media. I believe that the owning class goes maskless because everyone everywhere they go is made to mask & test. They own their own "bubbles" and have minders to enforce it for them. But they advocate publicly to drop precautions?
I don't KNOW that it is that, but I follow the science well enough. I hope you are not seriously affected in the long term. Surviving the initial illness has become normal with the vaccines, but the damned virus won't be entirely gone.
I got Covid symptoms starting on a Saturday and by Sunday was sure I would die from the pain in my head. There was no way I was living through til Monday when I could call the dr. And the I had a brainstorm. I looked up CVS telemedicine left a message and a Dr called me 10 min later, called in a prescription for Paxlovid and I got to the drive thru 15 min before they closed. I felt human the next day. Sadly, it caused me to get rebound Covid so I had mild Covid for about a month.
ReplyDeleteOh, I am so sorry. I hope you both are feeling much better very soon. I had it once in February 22, when NYC was reeling from its worst positivity figures; 50,000 cases a day. I had been “so good,” but that’s an indication of just how infectious this is. Grateful for the vaccine. I still mask up on public transit and at the theater. But most tourists don’t, which is frustrating. But if I think about them, I’ll just go batshit, so I’m just trying to watch out for myself and those I love. And next month when the new booster will be available, I’ll get it. Get well soon! 🙏🏻♥️
ReplyDeleteWhen your FB page mentioned Covid, I scrolled back to find the announcement! My husband and I are a few days in Covid (I had a really mild case 2 years ago between the two boosters)....I'm 80 but have done well; he's 69 and suffering. Doctor prescribed Paxlovid and we had to drive 46 miles one way to a pharmacy that had it. (Is it possible to have a "double" Covid? I'm feeling crappy again today!)
ReplyDeleteLooks like the doctors in FL have bought into the cruelty platform of the Reich Wing.
ReplyDeleteYou are such a paradox: Grumpy Old Man and National Treasure.
ReplyDeleteYou can get dick pills from an “Internet Doctor” — wondering if someone has figure out there might be profit in doing the same for Covid meds (the real stuff, not putting bleach up your bum or whatever the right wing nut jobs are on about these days). Hoping you are feeling much better by now.
ReplyDeleteI know some White Evangelicals still pushing Ivermectin. Wonder how many docs down your way are prescribing THAT.
ReplyDeleteSame shit for me and my wife. Virtually the same symptoms. We got the Paxlovid, though. Hang in there, chief.
ReplyDeleteDamn, man, I'm sorry to hear that. I'm glad it was "mild".
ReplyDeleteJust remembered you exist thanks to Bluesky (I'm all over Mastodon thanks to Dilbert Stark trashing Twitter). Much sympathy wrt. COVID; I dodged it for more than two years then caught it twice in four months in 2022 and it utterly sucks. I hope you do better than me with the brain fog: I think it probably cost me half a novel's worth of productivity, never mind being able to enjoy life. And it's left me with tremor/weakness in my right arm and decreased cardio fitness, a reminder that this is a systemic disease that screws up *all* your tissues, not just the lungs.
ReplyDeleteYou've inspired me to start putting on the mask again. Thanks, I guess? I started wondering too, since so many doctors offer online visits since the beginning of Covid, if it's possible to get Paxlovid that way. It looks like it is from quite a few providers. Has anyone tried this?
ReplyDelete