airborne...not droplets.
It is endemic.
Nothing short of full hazmat space suits can stop it.
Sooner or later:
We will ALL be exposed.
Many of us may show symptoms, mostly mild.
Some of us may get sick, and a subgroup may get really sick.
And some of us will die.
This is not the Bubonic Plague.
This is not the Spanish Influenza.
Tear off the face diaper and draw a deep breath...start building your immune system!
Smart man.
This virus is very, very contagious. It will get into everyones body if they have any contact ever at all. Count on it. Build your immune system and protect the most vulnerable.
Be happy, get sleep, take 5000 units of vitamin d a day, keep your nasal and throat passages clear, take C and zinc fairly often, 2-3x a day if you feel youre coming down with something. Magnesium in other forms than oxide (Thats the cheapest and amounts to only a laxative). Avoid sweets and too many carbs. Exercise.
I have been directly exposed by symptomatic people twice.
Once in my office (she thought it was allergies) and once with a friend of mine. We were at the range together.
The first case had other infections in her household form sharing a bottle of beer. The second one had no other cases.
My Doc thinks there is a good chance I have already had it, and shrugged it off.
Yup. H1N1 infected 61 MILLION Americans (killing an estimated 12,000+). And that’s not a Bidenist exaggeration.
COVID will eventually reach even more of us; hopefully by then there will be more widespread treatments and it will have mutated down to a manageable level.
Most of the initial worldwide panic was due to bad management decisions (nursing homes, excessive use of ventilators, etc.).