This morning we journeyed down into Portsmouth so my wife could have the first of her Covid vaccinations.
I won’t say that we breathed a big sigh of relief but we have probably relaxed a little.
My wife has been closeted away since last June, when we got back to the UK. Since then she has become really concerned about the covid statistics and the implications. Not just for her but for all of us.
She hasn’t ventured outside of our home more than, perhaps, half a dozen times. Most of those excursions have been of a medical nature.
Having the jab does change your perspective a little.
Of course we know that the vaccine doesn’t cure Covid, or prevent you from becoming infected. And, of course, it doesn’t mean you can go out freely. We are, after all, still in lockdown.
What it does show, is that we, as a country, are heading in the right direction, albeit slowly.
Rather these baby steps, than trying to run full tilt, lifting all the restrictions, only to fall flat on our faces. I personally think that the restrictions should not be lifted until at least 75% of the population have been vaccinated.
I’m rather hoping that, by the time the restrictions are lifted, my wife won’t have become a total hermit.
If nothing else, we know that she will be going out again in April, which is when the second jab is scheduled.