What bothered me most is that I've always had faith that what the Medical Profession recommended was probably in our best interests. In 55 years on the planet, I've not had any real necessity to second guess them.
My eight year old had cancer in 2018 and the care he received, and still does, has been quite superb.
But when the whole Covid thing occurred, one of my customers who is a retired heart surgeon had serious misgivings about how the situation was being handled. He and two other older specialists started asking questions in the briefings they attended. Simple stuff like why were the existing plans on pandemic handling being ignored? They then found themselves and their combined century of experience and expertise being excluded from any further briefings.
After my heart issue, I met up with a customer who'd had the same experience on a hospital day trip.
They ran an EKG, a CT scan and an ultrasoound.
The conclusions for both of us - in the end all of us - were identical:
There's nothing wrong with you.
We have no idea what caused the symptoms.
No one else has complained.
So I'd have been fairly happy with that and put it down to an unexpected glitch in something were it not for a conversation a year or so later with a Nurse from the same hospital who works in A&E.
I told her what the symptoms were and what happened and she replied:
" That's Myocarditis or Pericarditis- we saw loads of that in A&E. If it happens again call an ambulance."
That's what bothers me!
There's a good write up in The Lancet too although, like all primary media they aren't trying to link it to the jabs.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7762%2823%2900221-1/fulltext