Originally Posted by SCRooster
Originally Posted by BuckHaggard
Originally Posted by SCRooster
I had it three times and was one of the first to have a documented case in the Carolinas when I contracted it while on a project in Miller's Creek, NC in January of 2020.

Was later told patient zero in that area was on the U.S. Olympic ski team and she had just returned from practicing in China to her home in Miller's Creek, near Boone.


Lost all sense of taste and smell which is what triggered a later antibodies test in March of 2020 which proved it had indeed been Covid.

Got a second variation in August of 2020 after visiting with the grandkids in Florida.

Got my third and final strain when my youngest Son came home with it last Thanksgiving after a trip up to our hunting club in Michigan where he had spent some time with friends at the Michigan-Ohio State football game where apparently everyone in attendance caught it.

I remain a Pure Blood. Have always refused the vaccine.

All three were fairly rough for me .... got the Monoclonal thing on the third one which I found to be absolutely amazing. Almost instant cure. Then they cancelled monoclonal antibodies.

Why?

Watch the Water:

https://rumble.com/v10miez-world-premiere-watch-the-water.html

Antivenom IS monoclonal antibodies.

The FDA and CDC are evil. Watch the video above .... why does antivenom work against Covid?

How is the population being poisoned by snake venom?



I live not too far from there and had no idea it was in the area that early. Interesting. Miller's Creek is a very unusual place for an Olympic skier to live.

I've had it twice, in March 2021 and January 2022.


Yeah, I think she grew-up in Miller's Creek and her parents lived there or something, or she grew-up in Boone and her parents are now living in Miller's Creek, but she did a lot of her early training in Boone before moving-on-up to the big time.

I actually got a call from someone with health and human services in NC (equivalent to our DHEC down here) once my Internist had entered my name into some ewrly database once I tested positive for antibodies in March 2020.

I got through that case, really fricking bad case, on my own. And Inhad already had my flu shot, regular flu shot, in October of 2019. My Internist is a good friend ... he says my case has been very unique.

My second case he prescribed HCQ for me along with a Z pack of some sort ... plus my wife administered Ivermectin under the instruction of my ex-wife who is a nurse practitioner. They didn't want me going into the hospital that time, the worst time by far, but I was having severe respiratory issues that time ... although fever was not as prolonged or as consistently high as the first time. It was either the HCQ or the Ivermectin or both that turned it around for me within 48 hours. Incredible.

Third time ... the least severe of the other two strains, everyone in the family had it ... we called it The Michigan Strain and blamed it on Gretchen the witch Bitchmer .... but still, they had thr monoclonal thing going then and my wife and I took it and it was miraculous. Overnight the fever was gone and we both felt a ton better.

For me it all started in Miller's Creek in January of 2020 and the amazing thing was, from the get-go, I knew it was not an ordinary flu. I had been there a couple of weeks staying in a hotel. Was supposed to be there for two more weeks. It hit me on the 16th day, at night, .... and we found out later it definitely wasn't the hotel. The facility I was there auditing had an outbreak at the exact same time, young and old among their employees. But when it hit me it hit so fast and hard I checked out of the hotel the next morning and took off for home .... called my wife and told her I was on my way with the worst case of flu I had ever had .... took me six hours to drive home and I had 103.1 when got here ... my wife freaked. The rest is a long story but two weeks later I was still alive. That's when she went to fix me my first breakfast in all that time and I was strong enough to walk downstairs to the kitchen. I hollered-down at her, "hey, I thought you were fixing me breakfast?" She said she was .... hmmmmmm. So I made my way down the stairs .... she was frying bacon. I couldn't smell it and told her so. So she handed me a piece. I couldn't taste it either. First time in my life and it was a weird unforgettable sensation and realization.

We didn't know until March that it was Covid.

Now ... watch that video "Watch The Water." It explains why the taste and smell sensors are stunted by Covid and holeeeeeeeee $#!+!

It all makes sense now.


Damn man you have had a go with it. I lost my sense of smell and about 15lbs the first time, low grade nausea for about three weeks. Second time was like a head cold.

Wilkes County had some pretty big covid events, the Tyson facility got hammered early on.