Getting COVID for the first time in March 2023 is embarrassing, sad and deeply uninteresting. Nobody cares about your symptoms.
And if anyone is even reading this, it’s a miracle because most people stopped clicking on stories about COVID in mid 2021.
I know I did. But in the interests of making my COVID experience into content and salvaging something out of the sad rubble of my immune system, here are my revelations about what it’s like to be one of the last people on earth to get COVID.
1. YOU CAN JINX YOURSELF COVID-POSITIVE.
There are two dumb things I said that caused me to get COVID. Last Monday, I was in a car with some co-workers, asking one of them, "So, how was your COVID?". This has become my go-to conversation starter. It never gets old. Usually people laugh and they always have a story to tell, either about their experience having COVID or their experience during COVID. It opens people up, I find.
But in this case, it was a specific question because this co-worker had only recently recovered from her second bout.
We got talking about it and as is the way of these chats; she asked if I’d had it. Until last week, I have always half dreaded and half enjoyed this point in the conversation. Because part of me felt a tiny bit pleased with myself for getting through three years of a pandemic unscathed. The rest of me always knew that the tiny bit of smug would eventually bite me in the arse. 36 hours later, I had COVID.
The other dumb thing I said a few times over the past few weeks (unrelated to COVID) was "I just want to be by myself for a few days." Idiot.
2. COVID HURTS.
For the first 36 hours, I just kept whimpering to myself, "Oh my god, I’m so sick" in a voice so pathetic it made in cringe inside the whimpering. Everything hurt SO MUCH. Mostly every muscle and joint but also my teeth hurt and how is that even possible. I couldn’t get comfortable. My fever wouldn’t break. Painkillers laughed at me, they may as well have been Tic Tacs (note: they were not Tic Tacs, they were medicine and please see your doctor if pain persists etc etc).