If Covid Wants You . . .

Eventually, I kept saying, everyone is going to get Covid. Everyone. Eventually.

My “eventually” time came this past week. Lillian and I came home from New York with raging cases of Covid. It’s the worst disease I’ve ever had. It’s the sickest I’ve ever been. For a full week.

We came home late Saturday night. I started coughing Sunday. I went to the doctor Monday. Covid was the diagnosis. Unfortunately, because of the blood thinner drug I’m on to keep me from having a stroke, I couldn’t take the anti-viral drug to treat it. “Treat the symptoms,” the doctor said. So I had to slug it out for a week.

It was a week I was totally discombobulated.  My brain was fuzzy all week, my body ached in every single spot it had, and I was so weak I could hardly get up and down the steps to the living room.  On a scale of 1-10, most of the time I was a 3 at best.

It was a week I spent beating a path between my recliner and the bathroom. I had liquid running out of every orifice (well, not my eyes and ears, but the other four . . . ) I’ve been through three bottles of cough syrup, a bottle of Tylenol, and countless over-the-counter drugs that promise relief. None did.

I’ve been in bed 12 hours a day, mostly sleeping, and slept even more in the recliner. Zero energy. Complete exhaustion. I was in no danger of dying, but often felt like I wanted to. I’m 76 years old, I thought. How much longer do I really need to live?

I lost things. My appetite, for one and 10 pounds along with it. I ate a bit, but the food had no taste. My sense of smell, for another. I first realized that on one of my early trips to the bathroom. I counted that as a “plus.”

I awoke each morning hoping this would be the day I felt better. It took until this morning, Sunday, that I could say I actually felt a little better than yesterday. I actually got dressed, went outside and scraped some ice off the roof. My lungs appreciated the fresh air. I think I am a 6.

As for Lillian, well, her disease tracked mine. We were one laid-up pair. But today, while I feel a little better, she’s developed Pinkeye and is really miserable from that. For her sake, I hope it doesn’t last long.

And so a grand two-week adventure on the East Coast, including a full week in New York, came to an ignominious end. I’d love to write a long tale about our adventures, but my energy has come to its 400-word end. All I can say is, it is good to be back on the prairie. Now I just want to get out and see it. But I’m afraid it’s going to be a few more days before I do much venturing out.

Oh, and in case you’re wondering, yes, I did have all the shots and boosters. The last one just a few weeks before our trip. It didn’t matter, although it might have made my symptoms a little less harsh. But if Covid wants you, Covid is going to get you.

Lady Liberty and Times Square, the last two hihglights of our New York trip before Covid hit us.

6 thoughts on “If Covid Wants You . . .

  1. So very sorry you and Lillian had to go through this. Hope you both continue to feel much better. I’ve been hearing similar stories from people in our age group, even with all the shots.
    Enjoyed your trip to the East Coast.

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