I received my second covid jab today
This time it was from a gloriously hunky RAF serviceman instead of the cheerful oncology nurse.
His name was Will and he had big brown eyes and a voice to match.
I simpered underneath my mask like a teenage girl.
Will told me that I may have more severe side effects than I did with the first jab, but I wasn’t really listening,
I just drooled at him from behind my mask
Perhaps you could pop back to see the Hunky monkey Will to gift him a scotch egg as appreciation-then leave the chasing to him and ponder"will he won't he"x
ReplyDeleteI’m not that brazen
DeleteSounds like a fun way to spend a few moments getting jabbed. Hope you dream of those big brown eyes tonight, and I hope they don't fail your expectations!
ReplyDeletePS Glad you've had jab#2. xx
Xx
DeleteDrooling into your blue fishnet face mask. How very demure of you. X
ReplyDeleteI was every inch a Jane Austen heroine
DeleteAll heaving bosom and breathy flirtation. How utterly gorgeous of you x
DeleteVerily dear sir , what sooth is happening to me a poor simple girl of lowly birth
DeleteEach to their own John, whatever melts your butter!
ReplyDeleteAnd tickles your sausages
DeleteGet my first jab tomorrow. Hope I get it from a hunk.
ReplyDeletePatty
Good luck x
DeleteC'est la vie !
ReplyDeleteOui!!!!
DeleteHad my first yesterday, from a fearsomely efficient nurse. I and out in about 2 minutes. Happily few side effects...hope Will was wrong!
ReplyDeleteMe too...but he was pretty
DeleteGot my second jab on the 23rd, side effects didn't show up until last evening, over 24 hours.
ReplyDeleteI’ve heard they are slightly delayed
DeleteIs drooling now a recognised side effect of exposure to Will then? (although perhaps he prefers to be called Willie). One of the few side effects I would not suffer from.
ReplyDeleteDon’t knock it if you haven’t tried it
DeleteAh but I have many times been in the company of men that others drooled over, and I did not drool.
DeleteYou’ve not met the right one
DeleteBut I did, and she is called Margaret.
DeleteHe’s not too butch then
DeleteI'm not even butch, never mind my lady.
DeleteThanks for the warning about more side effects...
ReplyDeleteLucky you having someone nice!
Oh the memories of school clinic vaccinations, lining up in one long snake of young humanity for the not so careful and tender mercies of the injecting nurses.
I remember those too
DeleteI remember lining up on a Sunday with my parents as our community got the liquid polio vaccine (on sugar cubes) in the early 1960s. The conversations among the parents reflected their clear memories of the fright of polio in the 1950s.
DeleteThank God for researchers!
Hugs!
I remember queuing for the polio jab in the 1950s and it was a Sunday morning, I can still see the street, and the queue and remember the weather - it was cold and grey. We were given an injection. The end of the queue was not visible, everyone was quiet and nobody complained.
DeleteI can remember queuing for a jab in primary school
DeleteThe corridor was very grey and cold and there was few coats on the hooks on the wall
And a general air of terror!
DeleteThe polio queues were whole families, and it was all deadly quiet.
DeleteWhole families?
DeleteNo age categories, we all went together.
DeleteThat surprised me
DeleteWe were given a sugar cube with something on it to prevent a ghastly disease, at school, (I had thought polio), but at the same time, an injection for something. There were no families, though (in the 60's)...the air of terror was real enough!
DeleteGot my 2nd shot this morning and didn't drool at all!
ReplyDeleteYou haven’t lived
DeleteLOL ... oh, John ... I have definitely lived! At 77 years old ... I have lived a bit more then perhaps I should have! And, yes ... I have drooled, too!
Deleteooooooh! did your gaydar go "ping"?
ReplyDeleteMine did his didnt
DeleteAh, be still my heart! It's always good to enjoy the scenery!!
ReplyDeleteWe've been without computer/land line services for 36 hours due to a dead "service box" and its battery backup. The tech. has just been and fixed it (as is obvious!) so now our obsolete service and dead battery have been replaced with a new service box and new battery. Will go see what I've missed. :)
Hugs!
How did we ever cope without internet x
DeleteWhat's a service box Barbara? Maybe what we call a router? (I know that I am inviting the reply "what's a router?")
DeleteNope, the router is in the house and we purchased it. The router takes the translated signal and distributes it to the machines that use it (TV, computer).
DeleteThe "service box" is a terminal belonging to the cable company that translates the raw fiberoptic signal for the router to send through the house.
So says DH who understands these things.
Hugs!
Ah... I am further educated. Thanks.
DeletePerhaps your dreams of Will will avert the side effects.
ReplyDeleteThey will certainly divert me from any
DeleteI was like that about the bloke who gave me my first jab.
ReplyDeleteOooohhh do tell
DeleteHe was stroking my arm to get me relaxed and I was saying that I hadn't had my arm stroked like that in a long time and he could carry on and then before I knew it I had had the jab and I hadn't noticed. Lots of laughter and then it was all over. But he was lovely.
DeleteLucky cow
Deleteyou can't beat a good drool xx
ReplyDeleteI was frothing
DeleteHahahaha
ReplyDeleteOh this was great. I hope when I get my vaccine I also have a hunky serviceman administer it. Yep. Motivation.
XOXO
I should have fainted
DeleteOooh he sounds nice
ReplyDeleteHe looked like a young Russell Crowe
DeleteIn a yashmack
DeleteWhat needle?!
ReplyDeleteI never felt any prick jimbo
DeleteBest jab in history.
ReplyDeleteI would have gone round for another one
DeleteWhen I went to Hospital for some tests a lovely young Porter pushed me through the corridors in a wheelchair-he had quite a lick on and I thought it good fun-he asked if"it was ok"- I said "go faster"x
ReplyDeleteLol scream if u want to go faster, !
DeleteI enjoyed a young ambulance man getting his jab at the same time as me - he helped me up from my chair. We have to get our excitement where we can when we live alone!
ReplyDeleteYou fast cat
DeleteDrooling is the first side-effect! LOL
ReplyDeletei'm sort of liking wearing a mask. it covers lots of things, drool being one of them.
ReplyDeleteIt’s an interesting modern phenomenon
DeleteLots of people I know have remarked how much it is easy to hide behind a mask....how many people love that anonymous nature we have found ourselves in
Have you noticed how people are getting better at communicating with their eyes?
DeleteHumm I’m not sure
DeleteI feel rather deaf as I rely on lip reading
Wouldn't it be lovely if Will made a house call, you know, just to check in?
ReplyDeleteIn full uniform too!!!
DeleteOMG, you are too too funny. But I do the same thing when faced with what I call "eye candy". I'm sure his good looks made it go down easy. (I mean the medicine, not Will).
ReplyDeleteSteady girl lol
DeleteI hope I get jabbed by a hunk. He won't be from the RAF here. Maybe the Spanish Legion?
ReplyDeleteThe Spanish police always look pretty buff from what I remember
Deletehey...btw...which vaccine dd you get and will you let us know if you get symptoms? i got the moderna vaccine and exactly 24 hours after the first shot i got a wicked migraine that lasted for exactly 32 hours. at the 32 hour hour mark, i was instantly better. so weird!
ReplyDeleteI have had the Pfizer ....some minor aches with the first one
DeleteYou should meet my general practitioner, John. You'd faint dead away.
ReplyDeleteSend me a photo
DeleteAh well it added a little frisson for you...things are always mightily improved by a good view! Arilx
ReplyDeleteLittle pleasures Aril lol
DeleteI was having a bad day.
ReplyDeleteBut this made me smile.
Thank you john for sharing this today.❤❤
Anytime deArheart....we all need to try to be positive
DeleteAttraction is funny. Never know when and where it's going to strike. Strike it does... Enjoy the moment.
ReplyDeleteI did
DeleteI want more moments
So glad that you got the second jab we are still waiting for our first. Hope I have as much fun as you when I get it.
ReplyDeleteWhen my turn for the vaccine finally arrives I hope a hunky guy sticks the needle in my arm. My friend who has had both shots reports nothing more than a sore arm with both.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Hello John, we live near a major vaccination hub in Sydney, they have been going in a goodly manner for a few days. I told my sister in the British Midlands that our nurses & first responders were getting goodie bags so she told me I had to find out what was in them because that's not happening in her neck ofthe woods:-) The nurse I asked was so typically Aussie, she showed me (a small bottle of water, crackers & 2 snack bars) & then remarked:" They'll probably run out of them soon"
ReplyDeleteHad to laugh!
Glad you now have your second vaccination. I am hoping for the first one soon.
ReplyDeleteI always cried when having a jab when I was a kid, I hated needles, still do. I was always dragged to the front to have mine first so I didn't upset everyone else... I expect nothing has changed. I will be hiding until it is totally necessary for me.
ReplyDeleteJo in Auckland
I get my second Pfizer shot on Tuesday morning. I remember getting the pink sugar cube polio vaccine. I’ve also had shots for smallpox, the childhood illnesses, countless tetanus shots, hepatitis A and B, etc. I’ve never minded shots and will take almost any vaccine. I don’t understand the anti-vaxers.
ReplyDelete