Okay, so I was exposed with two people who has the virus. I was with these people for 2 days. They were already coughing and not feeling good, (but thought it was just a cold.) one was tested postitive for covid as she got worse and the other one tested positive as well for covid.....so then I had to go get tested. I came back negative and was negative for the antibodies as well. Could my immune system be able to fight the virus without needing the antibodies? If this is the case, and I am sure there's many others out there like me, why in the world would I take the vaccination when my body can already fight it on its own?
Same goes with the flu. I have never got that either....and have never gotten the flu shot to prevent it. In fact, I heard of people becoming very sick after taking the flu shot.
This is where I think your own self should be the one making the decisions of what's best for ourselves. We know ourselves better than anyone else. I become very leery when the government, who knows how to line their own pockets far better than helping its own citizens, tells me what they think is 'best for me.'
T and B cells far outlast the antibodies and give essential immunity after prior Covid infection. I tested negative for antibodies 2 months after I had covid. preliminary data suggest T cell immunity will last at least 4-7 years and even after would likely block one from having a moderate-severe case to covid. Issue is the mutation pressures the vaccine may cause on the virus will likely create variants adapted to bypassing that immunity for us and vaccinated people which is the main issue I have with this vaccination campaign.