Gransnet forums

Chat

No sh*t Sherlock! ?

(94 Posts)
phoenix Fri 13-Nov-20 21:19:33

Or stupid things that some people say.

Tonight, on Googlebox: "Well, I won't be having the vaccine, because I don't like needles (or he may have said injections) "

Well of course, some people just love them, don't they? hmm

Moggycuddler Sun 15-Nov-20 11:10:57

How about people (I know one) who say, when they have one, "I hate having bad headaches" or "I hate having diarrhea" etc. . . as if most people love having those things.

Bigjohn Sun 15-Nov-20 11:11:14

Candelle

I know of someone who disliked needles to the point of refusing injections to save her sight.

She became blind in the affected eye.

I don't have a problem with injections/needles (which is helpful as I have needed contact with many!) but can just about understand how affected some people are.

That's crazy, would much rather have the needle

Tedd1 Sun 15-Nov-20 11:35:50

I'm just on my way to get my second dose of trial vaccine, so here's hoping the needle doesn't buckle!

Nannina Sun 15-Nov-20 11:36:30

Very naughty of me but years ago when I was a young A&E nurse I used to love drawing up the tetanus jab in front of the Sunday morning sexist would be Romeo amateur footballers and rugby players who flooded in. That stopped them in their tracks and those that didn’t go faint reverted to sheepish little boy mode smile

inishowen Sun 15-Nov-20 11:39:55

I'd dont like having a mammogram. It hurts! However I'm going for an urgent one tomorrow.

HannahLoisLuke Sun 15-Nov-20 11:40:06

Phoenix I thought that programme about the jungle was highlights from the last 19 series, not just last year.
I didn't watch it though so only remembering what I thought I'd read in the tv timetable.

Blossoming Sun 15-Nov-20 11:42:46

Like many Grans I have to have regular blood tests and I admit to being a wimp about needles. As long as I don’t look at it I’m fine. The phlebotomist once told me that big strong young men were usually the worst when it came to passing out!

dragonfly46 Sun 15-Nov-20 11:44:46

Good luck tomorrow inishowen it is never nice even at the best of times.

Blossoming Sun 15-Nov-20 11:44:47

Inishowen good luck with tomorrow’s scan.

Quizzer Sun 15-Nov-20 11:54:19

My mother put me off needles by calling innoculations a 'jag'. Over the years, due to health issues, I have had many injections, blood samplings etc. It has never hurt that much and I don't care at all now.
Some people have funny phobias, my SIL hates the blood pressure cuff. She says it is agony!??
I think that tension brought on by the dread of these procedures in the cause of the pain.

harrigran Sun 15-Nov-20 11:54:51

GD had to have her mum go into school when she had her vaccination and hold her hand.
When we saw her later that day I asked her why she had just had her ears pierced if she doesn't like needles.
The look she gave me said it all, clearly I know nothing grin

jocork Sun 15-Nov-20 11:58:25

I've had to get used to needles as a diabetic as I have to have regular blood tests, though very few this year as my 6 monthly check was cancelled due to the last lockdown. My annual is due but was booked for a date when I was going away and hasn't been re-booked yet. I just find I'm fine as long as I don't look.
As for the vaccine I'll definitely be up for taking it. Even if 99% of people survive Covid there have been over 50,000 in this country who haven't! I don't wish to be added to that number!

Kryptonite Sun 15-Nov-20 12:10:33

And people who say "there's nothing worse than ..." followed by something really trivial. Good to have a reply ready for that one!

Wetnosewheatie Sun 15-Nov-20 12:30:48

It's like a wasp ? sting but I look forward to it as I'm so tired without it

Gransooz Sun 15-Nov-20 12:32:09

Inishowen, good luck for tomorrow. I dread having mammograms too. The last time I found it so painful I said to the mammographer that maybe I was just a wuss to which she seemed to agree! I said you would have thought they’d have found a less painful way to check and she said they had, but it was less expensive and quicker to do it the way they do. Seems that we are stuck with it.

Alegrias2 Sun 15-Nov-20 12:35:43

I would like to clarify something in case I didn't make my opinions clear enough on a post I made this morning.

I am not minimising the seriousness of the COVID epidemic and I would be first in line for a vaccine if they let me. Conspiracy theories undermine the health of the nation and need to be nipped in the bud.

Talking about the 99% survival rate doesn't remove the need for adhering to the restrictions that are in place and certainly doesn't mean that the disease isn't serious. But the odds are still on the side of the individual who gets it recovering, even if they are over 80. People with co-morbidities are at higher risk than those who have none and to have as many people taking the vaccine as possible means we reduce the risk of the disease for everyone, and can think to the future and the possibilities of getting our lives back to something more like normal.

LJP1 Sun 15-Nov-20 12:46:55

I always feel that choosing notto help stop transmission, means choosing to parasitise the rest of us who protect the vulnerable.

Sorry if I upset some people.

GreenGran78 Sun 15-Nov-20 12:54:17

Injections have never bothered me. However I recently had to have plastic surgery after my hand was severely cut in several places, damaging tendons and nerves. The dozen or so pre-op ‘pain-killing’ injections in varying places on my hand, including into the cuts, were bl** agony.

Jane10 Sun 15-Nov-20 13:05:12

Well done Tedd1. Its thanks to people like you that we can have some hope if a vaccine.

Caro57 Sun 15-Nov-20 13:13:08

Sadly some people DO love them and it's all part of a ritual - usually of abuse of medicines............

Justwidowed Sun 15-Nov-20 13:30:35

I'm on five injections a day but the needles are very fine and small añd do not hurt 99%of the time.I know some injections require far bigger thicker needles and can be painful. In the 1950's when I was diagnosed the needles were much thicker and had to last a long time but they kept me alive so I put up with them.Needles were better than the alternative which was death and of course still is .

FarNorth Sun 15-Nov-20 13:41:46

We don't get any statistics on long covid, in the 99% who don't die.
It does exist and isn't something anyone would want.

Alegrias2 Sun 15-Nov-20 13:54:59

The estimate is that 1 in 20 get Long Covid.

The latest analysis of data from thousands of users of the COVID Symptom Study app from ZOE, published as a preprint, shows that one in 20 people are likely to suffer from COVID-19 symptoms lasting more than 8 weeks.

Lots of supporting information at this link too: covid.joinzoe.com/post/long-covid#:~:text=But%20it%20hasn%27t%20been,

Deedaa Sun 15-Nov-20 14:01:58

My now retired GP used to go to Westminster to give MPs their flu jabs. I told him I hoped Jeremy Hunt would get a blunt needle and he said "Oh yes, I'll keep a special one for him"

tara Sun 15-Nov-20 14:02:16

B12 injections. I am being really cheered up by the comments as I am about to start a course of them!