Sorry to hear this. (Warning, rant ahead...)
When public health is pushing vax and relax as a strategy, this is what we get. Asymptomatic transmission is the silent killer here. The boosters will help to keep you out of the hospital, but maskless interactions resulting in repeat infections is the norm now. Nobody wants to hear about it because "we're not going there again."
I've never stopped wearing a high quality N95 respirator mask (the ones we couldn't find in 2020/21 because they were for HCWs only) wherever people gather, and so far it's worked. (If I had it, it was symptomless.) I wear it to protect not only me but the elder behind me in the grocery line who believes the public health message that masks are for losers but by all means keep up with the handwashing.
I'm an elder myself (too old for disability insurance), but I work full time at a university in a HEPA-filtered office. N95 goes on for the walk from the parking lot to the office, and again when I step out to use the nasty old washroom or mingle with students who bring All The Things from all over the world at the start of every term - the latest vax-evasive variant from Asia or the UK/EU, Strep A (which is killing little kids in my province), Flu A and B (also killing little kids and elders), and even TB which is popping up again on campus.
All airborne.
I also carry 70% alcohol sanitizer in all my bags and clean my hands after touching things or handling the mask. (I wash my hands a LOT.)
I see a long-hauler colleague struggle with the aftermath of her third infection after a couple of years on disability from number two, caught at a wedding in the 'masks off, we need to see your smiles!' spring of 2021. A previously robust 50-year-old professor who used to bike to work every day now needs to be dropped off at the building entrance because walking from the parking lot leaves her absolutely flattened. She thought she was up to teaching two courses this semester, but they had to cancel one which was fully enrolled when she caught #3 in November from her grown child who 'is just living his life' and shares her house. She's now back to about 10% capacity and there's no way to know if she'll manage to bounce back from this round. Someone described it as when the copier starts to run low on toner and the 100th copy is too faded to read, and that's so true. She is a shadow of who she used to be.
I also manage student requests for accommodations, and so I can see the damage overlapping infections (Covid+RSV+flu+strep at the same time) are doing to them, over and over again.
It's a real eye-opener, and so my respect for the virus has not diminished at all.
Repeat infections don't confer immunity. They just don't, because this thing is so brilliant at mutating around the zero protections we have and planes full of sick maskless passengers fly everywhere, all day long. (If you have some spare time, Google 'nextstrain' for some charts from experts who have been consistently reporting global mutations.)
I had the latest booster in October and paid extra to get the latest four-strain flu shot for seniors. I had H1N1 for six weeks in 1995 and do NOT want to go back there again.
I'm privileged to not have to use public transit, and I choose to avoid air travel and concerts, don't eat in restaurants unless it's on a patio, and yes, I am that crazy person who masks to go in to use the washroom. I will turn down invites to gather indoors in winter and managed to miss the holiday virus swap festival. Was quite happy home alone in my cozy cave interacting socially online. Totally doable at my level of privilege living alone.
How long will I keep doing these things? Probably forever if that's what it takes, because I don't want to live my few remaining years as an invalid or unknowingly pass it along to someone else. Are masks a hassle? Not really. It's a small thing that's just part of my day and it's not hard. We're in plague times after all, so it behooves me to act accordingly.
What's unsustainable is putting kids in daycare and schools that haven't given a thought to upgrading air filtration, and hospitals and long term care homes with zero precautions in place, when we have this endless revolving door of transmission of all the things sickening and killing people every day in a rapidly disintegrating healthcare system.
The alarm bells have been clanging for four years now and nobody is listening anymore in the denial stage. It's really quite something.
[This message edited by FaithFool at 8:44 PM, Saturday, January 20th]