I'm the person who's rapid test and pcr test came back (+) for covid around the 8th. I spent a week at home on Ivermectin and home brewing tea's before I became so short of breath and had to go to the ED.
I've since been in the hospital recovering with oxygen. I never was intubated, or vented.
The public shaming I got from not taking the shot is intense. I laid up in bed awake many nights wondering if I had made the right decision. I am now within an hour from discharge and I've been told that I could get the shot on the way out.
So from the 6th to now, my body's been developing natural immunity and I'm supposed to put that aside and still take the shot. I'm returning home and my life will never be the same.
They're saying I'm returning home with 4-6 liters of oxygen, I won't be able to work and I'm not sure how long I'll be laid up like this. Time will only tell.
I had a similar experience, in August I went on a business trip and knew flying home that I had caught covid. I had some HCQ/ZPAC/ZINC, which I immediately took. It did not work, I later realized it was expired. I could kick myself for not having Ivermectin on hand. I contacted Frontline doctors, but didn't receive it in time to help.
Sick in bed for a week with fever, then I started having breathing problems, and my oxygen was below 90. My family convince me to go to the emergency room.
They kept me only a few hours, sent me home with steroid and oxygen machine. My nurse was not vaxxed and I wasn't bullied about the fax.
My advice to you -- once you are off oxygen (about a week), take it slow and do not push yourself. Watch your oxygen levels and start very slow. You can not build back endurance by forcing yourself and getting out of breath -- let your body take it's course. It will take you at least 2-3 months before you will be able to feel close to normal.