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Both vaccinated, 61/56 high risk. I wrote a post update having covid the second time early this month and then this past weekend my Dad came down with it, really bad. Puking/fever/etc. Now Mom has it. I’ve never seen my Mom this sick. My Dad went to get the monoclonal antibodies Saturday and they couldn’t even take my Mom in until today. She literally told me “I am going to die, I think I’m going to die” and the fucking hospital turned her around, a high risk patient. Back home. She got her monoclonal antibodies this AM and now she’s still dry heaving/ high fever. Is this a normal side effect?

> Both vaccinated, 61/56 high risk. I wrote a post update having covid the second time early this month and then this past weekend my Dad came down with it, really bad. Puking/fever/etc. Now Mom has it. I’ve never seen my Mom this sick. My Dad went to get the monoclonal antibodies Saturday and they couldn’t even take my Mom in until today. She literally told me “I am going to die, I think I’m going to die” and the fucking hospital turned her around, a high risk patient. Back home. She got her monoclonal antibodies this AM and now she’s still dry heaving/ high fever. Is this a normal side effect?

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[–] 1 pt

One of the commenters chastise someone for blaming it on the vaccine, because "they were vaccinated all the way back in March-April", so obviously the vaccine had nothing to do with any of it.

So, if you have a reaction within 14 days of getting jabbed, it's not the jab's fault, and if you have a reaction 6 months later, it's still not the jab's fault. "Science" must be amazing!