I suppose it was only a matter of time before the Covid I got (likely last Wednesday), i.e.
Covid Strikes Even After 4th Booster Vaccine
would then infect Janice. But good grief, smacking her with such intensity! I mean from Wednesday morning she felt a scratchy throat - but by evening was wracked with full body aches and a 101.2 F fever. So fierce was the pain she could barely sit in her recliner and watch TV. By contrast, as I noted in the above link-post, the only symptoms I had were mainly a loss of taste: first Thanksgiving night (with a turkey sandwich that tasted like cardboard) then the next morning with a Burger King double croissanwich b'fast nearly half of which I had to toss on account of absolute tastelessness. I had considered not mentioning it at all to Janice, then thought the better of it. This is given the first thing she thought of was Covid - despite already getting the 4th booster (both of us), e.g.
- 4th Covid Booster - Brings Most Severe Side Effects...
- In retrospect it's a damned good thing I did tell her as the home test exposed me as a Covid carrier, and who knows how long I'd had it. But my best guess was from the Wednesday when I felt somewhat out of sorts and like my brain was off kilter. The result of that was overcooking the stuffing, and a few other snafus.(Forgetting to open the can of cranberry sauce, prepping Janice's baked potato.)
- But maybe the worst thing - and this is given I didn't then know I had the bug- preparing a red cabbage cole slaw for each of us. This entailed finely slicing the cabbage, and a section of onion, then gathering each set up (by hand) and placing it into our respective bowls before adding Janice's superb cole slaw dressing. So I suspect the initial transmission occurred via her eating the cole slaw I had prepared by hand. This as opposed to the alternative hypothesis of fomites' transmission, i.e. picked up by handling surfaces I had touched - like the remotes, dishes, phone - on which were left infectious viral particles on inanimate 'debris'. See e.g.
- Real-life lack of evidence of viable SARS-CoV-2 transmission via inanimate surfaces: The SURFACE study - PMC (nih.gov)
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