How my husband got vaccinated against his will

When vaccination against COVID-19 started in spring last year in Japan, my husband and I were very skeptical of the products. It usually takes about ten years for vaccine development. So, we decided not to get vaccinated hastily but wait at least until the completion date of the clinical trial set in 2023, watching how things are going.

Four months later, he had a cerebral stroke. When I saw him, he seemed confused. He said he couldn’t understand what he was doing. It was abnormal. He had a disturbance of consciousness.

I called an ambulance. We were very lucky as it came to our house in ten minutes and found a hospital soon. Before long he was diagnosed as having cerebral infarction. It was caused by a thrombus from the heart due to atrial fibrillation. The only cure was heart surgery. Therefore, we agreed to have surgery. The cerebral infarction caused by atrial fibrillation is sometimes fatal, or the patient becomes bedridden. We don’t want to experience such a situation.

What I was surprised was, however, that the attending doctor told him to get vaccinated against COVID-19 beforehand and that it was also the condition to have heart surgery.

My husband seemed to feel that he had to accept the condition for the surgery even if he doubted vaccines. What he desired least was to live with arrhythmia. He just wanted to go back to life as before after having surgery.

However, such a condition was unacceptable to me. I couldn’t understand why the doctor forced my husband to do so. I wondered what the doctor’s intention was.

After searching and browsing the net about vaccines, now I think I came to a tentative conclusion. That is shocking and hard to accept as a patient. That is, most medical doctors don’t know much about vaccines. The attending doctor told my husband to get vaccinated without deep knowledge about vaccines. He had no particular evil intention in doing so.

Even so, I was seriously thinking about the doctor’s possible intentions last summer, about what would happen if we accepted the condition, if we rejected it and if we changed the hospital.

The point of thinking was to avoid the scenario that terminates his life earliest. The answer was clear. Because of the emergency of the disorder (cerebral infarction), the situation we want least is a rejection of acceptance by the nearest hospital which can treat him for his disease. And that was the hospital he was sent to when he had cerebral infarction last summer.

Since the survival depends on the time from the onset of stroke to the start of treatment, rejection of acceptance by such a hospital is directly connected to rising fatality.

Therefore, we cannot do anything which makes doctors of the hospital feel offended. That led us to choose the scenario to get vaccinated and have the surgery at the hospital.

Then what about warnings against vaccines given by eminent researchers and doctors worldwide? Once he had the vaccine, he might not be able to live longer than five years if they are right. I hope that won’t happen. I would like to believe human beings are much more complicated than evil minds’ plots.

So, I started collecting detox information from the net.

A few weeks later, he got the first jab. His condition didn’t change at all! I was jubilant! He might have had a placebo! After the second one, however, he had diarrhea but no fever.

I started making pickles fermented in rice bran at home because I’ve heard fermented foods are good for detox. I also purchased Ivermectine from abroad in case. I did everything I could.

What do you think was the result?

My husband came to look at me with pity.

He wasn’t believing what I was saying about the pandemic and vaccines.

I cannot talk about these things to him anymore.

When did it start from?

Perhaps it was from when he decided to get vaccinated.

He said he wouldn’t care what was included in vaccines when I talked about the content of vaccines such as graphene oxide, parasites, metals, and so on. He seemed to have decided to look away from vaccines at that time.

That attitude became solid as he experienced only mild adverse reactions.

That made it difficult for us to talk freely as before. He is looking down on me now, but I have a small pride in myself.

I have done these things for him, desiring to save his life, but all of them backfired.

We have an abyss between us.


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