Dylan, Thanks for posting. My condolences about your friends.
I hear you, I really do.
I do know 2 people who died of covid early in the pandemic, but I now realize, they were undoubtedly isolated, vented, and given remdesivir, and also not treated for bacterial pneumonia, which they most likely had developed while left alone, lying day after day in the hospital bed like that. Both, in their early 70s, but in very good health previously, died of organ failure after a few weeks in the hospital. A horrible way to go, and I now know, probably entirely unnecessary.
The others I know who died in the pandemic, it was "with covid" (they were elderly already dying of something else) and/ or it was post-jab, in other words, it was a result of the jab.
There is a way to translate anger, I do know this much. What would be the best way to do that for you, or for anyone else, I cannot say.
For me, it is to stay focused on the people, animals, and things I am grateful for, and also to use my creative imagination.
One thing (of several things) that I have been doing is transcribing short recordings or excerpts from recordings. This is a way to both share and preserve a human voice with a message that, in some way, in this dreadful situation, sheds light.
There are so many, many things that can be done, and including things that are perhaps apparently indirect and small, but also really important, too. Just to take one example of what could be ***thousands*** of examples, what about the pets of people who were injured by the vaxx? Just help with walking a family member, friend or neighbor's dog a day or two a week, that could make a world of difference to some people right now. Many people survived the loneliness of the lockdowns thanks to their pets. For so many people, their pets are their lifeline to mental health.
Animal shelters also need volunteers. Endless opportunities to help, right there.
Endless opportunities, endless. Don't forge the Children's Health Defense Fund, and the like, they are doing good work, they are having some important successes, and they need volunteers.
Prayer, too.
Our host has often spoken of taking negative situations / events as "thrust-blocks." I think this is brilliant.
Re: NHS collapsing
Dylan, Thanks for posting. My condolences about your friends.
I hear you, I really do.
I do know 2 people who died of covid early in the pandemic, but I now realize, they were undoubtedly isolated, vented, and given remdesivir, and also not treated for bacterial pneumonia, which they most likely had developed while left alone, lying day after day in the hospital bed like that. Both, in their early 70s, but in very good health previously, died of organ failure after a few weeks in the hospital. A horrible way to go, and I now know, probably entirely unnecessary.
The others I know who died in the pandemic, it was "with covid" (they were elderly already dying of something else) and/ or it was post-jab, in other words, it was a result of the jab.
There is a way to translate anger, I do know this much. What would be the best way to do that for you, or for anyone else, I cannot say.
For me, it is to stay focused on the people, animals, and things I am grateful for, and also to use my creative imagination.
One thing (of several things) that I have been doing is transcribing short recordings or excerpts from recordings. This is a way to both share and preserve a human voice with a message that, in some way, in this dreadful situation, sheds light.
There are so many, many things that can be done, and including things that are perhaps apparently indirect and small, but also really important, too. Just to take one example of what could be ***thousands*** of examples, what about the pets of people who were injured by the vaxx? Just help with walking a family member, friend or neighbor's dog a day or two a week, that could make a world of difference to some people right now. Many people survived the loneliness of the lockdowns thanks to their pets. For so many people, their pets are their lifeline to mental health.
Animal shelters also need volunteers. Endless opportunities to help, right there.
Endless opportunities, endless. Don't forge the Children's Health Defense Fund, and the like, they are doing good work, they are having some important successes, and they need volunteers.
Prayer, too.
Our host has often spoken of taking negative situations / events as "thrust-blocks." I think this is brilliant.