Heart Attack Like Symptoms

Originally published on December 30, 2021.
Last Updated on February 28, 2024.

In my relatively small circle of friends and acquaintances I have two good friends who have been rushed to the hospital in the past couple of months experiencing heart attack like symptoms. Neither actually had a heart attack. Both are around 50 yrs old. Both were put on statins for cholesterol issues and told to reduce stress in their lives. And both were double vaxxed.

Is my local circle of friends a proper ‘test group?’ No. Does the similarity of their lives, ages, symptoms and outcomes mean anything in a way that we can extrapolate into a larger group? Probably not. Are they an anomaly … mere blips in the haze of data? That, we don’t know.

There seems to be a huge dichotomy in the data and anecdotal reports we are getting from our local health care professionals. Those who have sludged up are telling stories of overflowing hospitals with overworked staff due to covid patients. Those who have rejected the clotshot and subsequently lost their jobs seem to be telling a different story = empty beds, empty departments with pressures from above to obfuscate what is happening in our hospitals.

Is there an increase in ‘heart attack like symptoms?’ Is the sludge damaging hearts? Would ‘they’ even tell us if it was?

One of the biggest failings, and probably the longest lasting damage done by Covid will be the lack of clean data to study and learn from. When the next plandemic comes, how will we react? What should we do? If we have learned anything from the past two years, it is that the pollicization of health care destroys any pretense that our health care system can be trusted. Is your doctor advising your best course of action based on science? Or is it based on his political views … or on the monetary windfall he is about to receive for pumping a diagnoses or drug? Who knows?

What is clear is that we have to take back responsibility for our own health care. We need to know a bit about how our bodies work and what is ‘normal’ for us. We need to build on what makes us feel better and reduce what harms us. Monitor yourself for changes in what you recognize as your personal baseline. I’m not a doctor, nor do I play one on TV, but I’ve lived in a body for 50 some years. When I put conscious thought into it, I can tell you what has worked for my health in the past … and also what has not worked. We are all in the long process of dying, but we can slow the pace by piling up the things that make our bodies work better and rejecting those things that hurt.

Think about these things now, when you are well, so you won’t have to figure them out when you are ill. Plan your potential course of action now. That is all for now.

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