mathjak107 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 09, 2021 2:30 pm
At this point with so many getting the vaccine and the remaining natural immunity from those with covid should be enough to get that herd immunity .
Then it won’t matter if the antivaxers get it or not ...the rest of use will end up carrying their lazy asses across the finish line because we did
Since you by far the among us with by far the worst virus experience....I'm interested in your response to the below...
Thanks
Vinny
https://www.nj.com/yankees/2021/03/yank ... e-out.html
Yankees’ Zack Britton got COVID with wife in labor, and it was hellish: ‘It wiped me out!’
As terrible as 2020 was for everyone in so many ways, the new year already has been even more cruel to Yankees reliever Zack Britton.
With one exception: Wife Courtney delivered their fourth child in January. But while daddy was there for the birth, he suspects that their trip to a hospital near their Spicewood, Texas home is what triggered his very unpleasant bout with COVID.
“I think I got it at the hospital when we were having our kid,” Britton said.
Britton currently is dealing with a new health setback, elbow surgery next Monday in New York to remove a bone chip, but he figures recovering from that procedure will be less taxing than what he endured this winter. After getting COVID, the 6-foot-1, 200 pounder lost 18 pounds in 10 days.
“It wiped me out pretty good,” Britton said. “I wasn’t looking to lose 18 pounds, and it happened quickly, so that’s not good on your body.”
Absolutely not.
Britton did a lot of studying up on the pandemic after it shut down baseball for 3 ½ months starting last March 12 ? one year ago this Friday. Although anything but naïve to the dangers, he figured if he had ever contracted COVID that it wouldn’t be that bad on him because he’s just 33 and a fit professional athlete.
“I was very aware of what was going on around the world and the deaths, so it definitely wasn’t something I was taking lightly,” Britton said. “We were being smart about it. Unfortunately I got it, and it opened my eyes to that it was maybe worse than I thought it would be if I got it.
“I was not expecting to get hit that hard by COVID. The weight loss was surprising. There was a period of time right after I got it that it was difficult to work out. I was losing stamina. I was out of breath quite a bit. The aftereffects that I’ve been dealing with showed me how serious this can be even for somebody that’s healthy and how it can impact you months even after you’re over the roughest symptoms.”
By early February, Britton headed to Tampa for spring training not fully recovered. His weight and strength hadn’t returned all the way, so the Yanks opted to proceed slowly. That’s why he hadn’t yet pitched in a Grapefruit League game prior to his elbow discomfort setting in last Sunday after he threw a bullpen.
“Losing 18 pounds ? that’s not good on your bbody and it puts pressure in a lot of places, so we were smart about what I was going to do,” Britton said. “I thought we were on a really good program. (COVID) cost me about three or four weeks of throwing in the offseason, so a gradual build up is what we were doing, and things were going well up until after that last bullpen.”