Comments posted organically
Homepage

Indy, our RomanCatholicChurch-ophile, is gunna frigginLove this!
Humor by HatetheSwamp (0.0) Last comment by: HatetheSwamp (6 comments)


Did you know that Donald Trump is actually Jesus Christ...?
Role Playing Games by Ponderer (0.0) Last comment by: HatetheSwamp (23 comments)


Pope body slams Trump, Brown Shorts and OD with one sentence...
Religion by Indy! (0.0) Last comment by: oldedude (13 comments)


Eric Swalwell is rapidly becoming a #metoo-ed Andrew Cuomo 2.0
Politics by HatetheSwamp (0.0) Last comment by: oldedude (38 comments)


"English is hard...
Politics by HatetheSwamp (0.0) Last comment by: HatetheSwamp (12 comments)


Life Hack: Get Real Starbucks Taste At Home By Dumping Hot Water Over Cigarette Ashes
Food & Beverages by HatetheSwamp (0.0) Last comment by: Indy! (4 comments)


Iran is also winning the Sh*t Talk War
Humor by Donna (0.0) Last comment by: oldedude (19 comments)


The 13yr Trump raped in 1994, spills the beans on the Predator-in-Chief
Crime by Indy! (0.0) Last comment by: Curt_Anderson (40 comments)


More than 7,000 people attend vigil at Colorado State University for Charlie Kirk
Religion by HatetheSwamp (0.0) Last comment by: Navy2711 (81 comments)


Public Service Announcement:
President by Ponderer (0.0) Last comment by: HatetheSwamp (6 comments)


Trump endorsed Viktor Orban loses election
Politics by Curt_Anderson (0.0) Last comment by: oldedude (6 comments)


Hegseth Holds Protestant-Only Religious Service at Pentagon
Religion by Donna (0.0) Last comment by: islander (59 comments)


Medical selectors, pages, etc.
The link between COVID vaxes and anxiety disorders
By oldedude
March 5, 2026 3:31 pm
Category: Medical
(0.0 from 0 votes)
Rules of the Post & Tips.

SelectSmart.com SelectSmart.com SelectSmart.com SelectSmart.com


In all four of these studies, There is a distinct correlation between the COVID and in one case, influenza Vax's and a higher percentage of symptoms of anxiety, insomnia, or depression. For those of you that got every vax known to get shot with, the issues multiply. The largest percentage of people saw responses generally between 14-42 days after the inoculation. the different vax's reacted with people differently, with the first and third round being the most harmful.

Long story short. For those that did get all vaxxed up, be aware!


Cited and related links:

  1. cdc.gov
  2. sciencedirect.com
  3. onlinelibrary.wiley.com
  4. gavinpublishers.com

Comments Start Below


The views and claims expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views and beliefs of SelectSmart.com. Not every statement made here can be assumed to be a fact.
Comments on "The link between COVID vaxes and anxiety disorders":

  1. by Donna on March 5, 2026 3:47 pm

    Yes, many people get all worked up when they get a needle.

    From the CDC report:

    Discussion

    Anxiety-related events, including syncope, can occur immediately after vaccination with any vaccine and might be caused by anxiety about receiving an injection (3). Although four of the five mass vaccination sites that reported anxiety-related events temporarily suspended COVID-19 vaccination, none of the reports to VAERS was considered serious. Reports of syncope were approximately 164 times more common after Janssen COVID-19 vaccination (8.2 per 100,000) than after influenza vaccination (0.05 per 100,000).

    Approximately one quarter of the syncopal and other anxiety-related events after receipt of Janssen COVID-19 vaccine described in this report occurred in persons who reported a history of similar events after vaccination. Because the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine is administered as a single dose, this vaccine might be a more attractive option for persons who have needle aversion. Therefore, it is possible that some persons seeking Janssen COVID-19 vaccination could be more highly predisposed to anxiety-related events after being vaccinated. The stress of an ongoing pandemic might also increase anxiety surrounding COVID-19 vaccination. In addition, in mass vaccination situations, an anxiety-related event witnessed by others on-site or reported through media coverage might provoke additional anxiety-induced episodes (4).

    Approximately one half of reports to VAERS of syncope after Janssen COVID-19 vaccination were for persons in the youngest age group (18–29 years) recommended for vaccination. Adolescents have higher rates of syncope after vaccination. For example, a rate of 7.8 syncopal events per 100,000 doses administered was reported after receipt of quadrivalent human papillomavirus vaccine (5). Most VAERS reports of syncope are for children aged 11–18 years (62%), followed by adults aged 19–49 years (25%) (6). As use of COVID-19 vaccines expands into younger age groups, providers should be aware that younger persons might be more highly predisposed to anxiety-related events after vaccination than are older persons.


  2. by Curt_Anderson on March 5, 2026 3:55 pm
    Thanks a lot, NOW some of the people who took the Covid shots will have anxiety, insomnia, depression, et cetera!

    The CDC's five year-old study was "Anxiety-Related Adverse Event Clusters After Janssen COVID-19 Vaccination — Five U.S. Mass Vaccination Sites, April 2021". I never heard of Jannsen. We received Moderna and Pfizer vaccinations.







  3. by oldedude on March 5, 2026 4:34 pm
    I already think we know who had all the shots... I think it's pretty apparent.

    The Jassen was the study out of Saudi.


  4. by Curt_Anderson on March 5, 2026 4:49 pm
    OD,
    According to your CDC.gov link Janssen is a brand of Covid vaccines. I read elsewhere that it's made by Johnson & Johnson. I don't see Saudis being mentioned.


  5. by oldedude on March 5, 2026 4:52 pm
    This one. I put it in there to show a diversity in locations. I wanted to get the Israeli stats.
    gavinpublishers.com


  6. by Curt_Anderson on March 5, 2026 5:20 pm
    OK, I see Saudi Arabia and a lot Arab-sounding names mentioned there. It doesn't mention Janssen though.

    I suspect that many of the 232,000 unvaccinated adults who died of COVID had anxiety, insomnia, depression, regret among other psychological issues.

    pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov


  7. by Indy! on March 5, 2026 6:39 pm

    Odorous - so you didn't get any of the shots?

    Full disclosure: I took the first one mainly due to family pressure and the fact one of the venues where I was seeing a lot of concerts started requiring proof of vaccination for entry. Later I was sorry for doing it and did not get any more after the first one. Somewhat interesting sidebar: My mother and myself both had weird heart issues that were very similar about the same amount of time after getting our shots. Not saying they were related to the shots - just saying it was a weird coincidence and neither of us have had any similar events since then.


  8. by oldedude on March 5, 2026 7:40 pm
    I took one. Same reasons. I'm refusing all the rest. forever. The difference between you and me, is that I don't want to give the grandkids stupid shit. You can't find a woman that will share your genetics or have any sex with you unless you pay her.

    I'm trying to get the kids (since the family are non vaxers) MMR exposer. What we know is that the exposure IS more valuable than the shots. But that's down the road. The oldest needs to be 7-10 to do that the best. I don't want them to get it during or post puberty.


  9. by meagain on March 6, 2026 11:06 am
    Naturally some people have anxiety about vaccines. Generally, they have an aversion to the needle, not to the injection. However, it beggars belief that intelligent people ( that does not include OD) refuse vaccines> Any of the approved vaccines. Measles is making a comeback. THat is a killer, mostly of infants. It also can have life-long negative effects. Covid is still around and still killing. It is still here because those who were unvaccinated are spreading it.

    It is selfish in the extreme to not vaccinate. An unvaccinated person is a danger to society.


  10. by oldedude on March 6, 2026 11:54 am
    I'll respond to the folks not getting vaxed for known (mostly childhood) diseases. These are things like polio, MMR, etc. I agree with you about the rise in these diseases. AND with the "freedom" not to get sick, also comes responsibility. For those not taking the shots, the parents need to expose the kids to these diseases. We've discussed this several times. I wouldn't do this with, say the polio vax. You need to suck on the sugar cube. Simple as that. you don't want to catch that. As a kid, we had MMR parties at about the ages of 8-10. That is actually more effective than the vax and you don't want to get MMR post pubescent as all three of those can do a lot of damage to the person. Those folks NOT doing this should vax. Period. Again, if you've had the vax, there shouldn't be any problem to be around someone that's sick. Since that's the religion of vaxers, right? You vax so you won't get the disease. Doesn't that make sense to you? It's a big battle with my son and daughter in law. He doesn't want vaxed, she won't expose them. To me, its "make a choice" period.


    Regarding the actual thread. This isn't just about "fear of needles" if you'd read the posts. There is a distinct correlation between the COVID and influenza Vax's relating to a higher percentage of symptoms of anxiety, insomnia, and depression. All of these relate right back to those AWFULs, which actually include you. I honestly think the vaxes per se directly contributing to "fear of needles" is bullshit. I think you can go right back to the anxiety, depression, and insomnia.

    The symptoms of anxiety vary from person to person, and they grow in severity based on the cause of stress. But in most cases, anxiety occurs when a perceived threat triggers these symptoms for a prolonged period of time and disrupt your daily life. You can experience physical signs of anxiety or mental and emotional signs of anxiety, and sometimes, even all of them at once."



    health.clevelandclinic.org


  11. by Indy! on March 6, 2026 12:26 pm
    by oldedude on March 5, 2026 7:40 pm
    I took one. Same reasons. I'm refusing all the rest. forever. The difference between you and me, is that I don't want to give the grandkids stupid shit. You can't find a woman that will share your genetics or have any sex with you unless you pay her.



    See? I try to play nice and you want to be a dick. I got news for you, bro - I'd put the women I've dated up against the cows you've had to suffer thru with any time you're ready. I grew up in Miami with the hottest women on the planet- you grew up in various shitholes around the world like Colorado.


  12. by oldedude on March 6, 2026 3:04 pm
    And I never had to pay any. Sorry, you "being nice" one time doesn't work.


  13. by Indy! on March 6, 2026 4:23 pm

    You act like that's some kind of badge of honor, but just bringing up the idea tells me you probably every time outside of your wife (and maybe even she charged you a few times). You expose yourself with the wild accusations, Odorous - not the people you accuse. You didn't learn that from being identified as the board pedophile?


  14. by oldedude on March 6, 2026 6:32 pm
    As usual, you can't comprehend english. You can't understand Spanish.

    If you want to actually make an "attempt" at being nice, try it for a day. I know that's impossible because you have to make yourself feel better about total feelings of inadequacy, and knowing you're truly a useless human being.


  15. by Indy! on March 6, 2026 6:34 pm

    So you feel inadequate too. Sorry to hear that, Odie - but from what I know about you that certainly makes sense.


  16. by oldedude on March 6, 2026 7:05 pm
    no, I'm fine with my life. I'm using my education so that wasn't a waste of money, worked in great jobs, lived a good life, doing things and seeing things that most Americans would never see in their lives. I have a great wife, excellent kids and grandkids. My ethics are intact, as are my core values. I'm grateful for what I have and the people around me. I'm not a victim in my life, which is very different than most others on SS.


  17. by myce on March 6, 2026 7:22 pm

    Colorado's a shithole Indy?? I mean, yes it is. Except, there are numerous tourist attractions especially if you like the outdoors. I'm planning to do an historical mine tour and train ride in the mountains this summer. Please visit, spend some money then go home. 😉


  18. by Indy! on March 6, 2026 7:36 pm

    I'm sure there are very nice parts of Colorado, just like I'm sure those are not the parts where OD lived. He accepts the fact he's been a victim in his life though - so he's okay living in shitholes.


  19. by Navy2711 on March 7, 2026 6:13 am

    Every single anti-vaxxer ...

    Every SINGLE one of them ...

    When they get some serious medical situation, one that they know they can't just soak in Epsom salts, or have some chicken soup and rest and it will go away by itself

    ... will IMMEDIATELY go to a hospital and seek the help of the doctors. The same doctors that they don't trust when it comes to vaccination.

    When some anti-vaxxer explains that bit of cognitive dissonance to me, I'll start listening to their crazy anti-vax theories.


  20. by oldedude on March 7, 2026 6:27 am
    It's really interesting. I love the state. It does have a lot of great features. I chose NOT to deal with their government overreach, excessive taxation, and stupid laws. That's a CHOICE (look it up).

    But it's a choice. Kind of like I don't hate "Jews" I hate Israel thing that if it's turned on the sheeple, they can't understand it.

    I'm living in the state I choose to. No one is making me do it. I am not a victim of my circumstances. And honestly, you can't "make" me do anything. It's all a choice in my life. I do pay taxes. It's a choice because if I don't... sort of thing.

    I know that concept is extremely confusing for liberals that are victims of their life. So they whine and are little bitches about everything they have and don't have in their life. That's the "So and so is MAKING ME do this and such."


  21. by Indy! on March 7, 2026 11:04 am

    No idea what all that whining from Odorous is about.

    But I can easily answer Navy's question. First off, I am not an anti-vaxxer in any way - I took every vaccine they gave us back in school and whatever my doctor recommended my entire life - until covid. I was a little leery of a vaccine that was conveniently created that quickly. No long term testing, no white papers, no blind placebo comparison studies... Since I worked from home and had minimal contact with other people that wasn't initiated by myself - I was fine just quarantining myself.

    Anyway - back to Navy's... ahem... conundrum. The reason some people don't trust vaccines but DO trust "those same doctors" (actually totally different doctors - but that's a side issue) when it comes to treating an ailment (or injury) is because they are two different things. Vaccines are preventative medicine and treatment is reactive medicine. You take a vaccine because something MIGHT happen - it's like buying insurance - maybe you need it, maybe you don't. If you're already ill - you're being treated for something already affecting you. So there is no real choice involved.


  22. by HatetheSwamp on March 7, 2026 11:15 am

    Purely anecdotal, but I got the first two COVID shots. After that, I had an appointment with my eye doctor who found an aneurysm in my left eye that had not been there before. There's no family history of that. I've not another COVID Vax since. I'm still alive.


  23. by Navy2711 on March 7, 2026 12:18 pm

    Idiot,

    Things you forgot to mention in your anecdote:

    - Your age

    - Your blood pressure

    - If you've been diagnosed with atherosclerosis or diabetes

    - What medications you're on, including blood thinners.

    - Lifestyle - smoking, drinking, aerobic fitness, etc.

    - Family history is not relevant. Aneurysms can happen spontaneously. Sometimes people are just unlucky.

    - Any other incidents / illnesses you developed shortly after getting the vax. "I got an aneurysm after the vax" sounds scary. "I got the vax at CVS and tripped on the curb when I walked out" sounds silly ... but it's the same logical fallacy.

    (Don't supply any of this medical information. I don't care)

    _____________________________________


    In studies conducted by actual experts who rely on more than bumpkin anecdotes, hundreds of millions of vaccinated people worldwide were evaluated and very rare, very specific side effects were identified - myocarditis and TTS blood clotting - neither of which are eye aneurysms.

    Humans eagerly confuse causation and correlation. It's an evolutionary survival feature - false positives are cheap, but false negatives can be fatal.



  24. by HatetheSwamp on March 7, 2026 12:48 pm

    My health is decent. My blood pressure is normal, 125/70ish. My A1C is friggin 5.5, baby! And, absolutely no family history. None. Don't smoke. Maybe half a glass of wine a year. Only Rxes are Crestor and antihistamines for occasional outbreak of hives. And, of course, a baby aspirin a day. I exercise 30 minutes to an hour 7 days a week.

    But, yeah. Anecdotal. I don't know. Just not taking chances


  25. by myce on March 7, 2026 2:26 pm

    It's my understanding the spike protein of the COVID virus have the effect of cutting or scraping the walls of the blood vessels. Those who die typically suffocate from the bleeding in their lungs. The vaccine uses the blueprint for the spike protein to trigger the immune response. It does not surprise me if there are unexpected side effects.

    Vaccines typically make me feel sick from the immune response. COVID vaccine made me feel sick as expected. I still got COVID lol, but it was like a cold. What tipped me off to get tested was a little vertigo which is not usually a cold symptom.

    COVID is a horrible way to die, but almost nobody who was vaccinated died of COVID (with maybe one or a few exceptions). Individual vaccination does not work 100%. But they work better when everyone has been inoculated against disease. You're less likely to get disease when the people around you are not carrying them.


  26. by meagain on March 7, 2026 3:19 pm
    Deaths directly caused by Covid vaccines are so rare as to be negligible. What did iccur are mostly some bloodclotting by the AstroZeneca which was a traditional, type of vaccine. Those were rare and it was said that birth control pills caused 30 times as many as the vaccine. Anyone who does not take them should rethink it because Covid is still here and poised to hit hard again since there was not enough vaccination to create herd immunity.

    I recall one ER doctor saying that the ER was overloaded and there was one one vaccinated person there. To think that one is not exposed enough to bother, is living in a fool's paradise. It can be picked up from a door handle, not just proximity to a sufferer. The droplets also travel farther through the air than was at first thought.


  27. by Indy! on March 7, 2026 3:31 pm

    I was infected with covid at least once - possibly two times. The first time - which I actually did test and was positive - occurred about 2 years after getting the original covid vaccine. It was like having a midrange flu - the main difference being the phlegm period lasted longer and it was a thicker variety. The second time was about another 2 years later and was a very similar experience. Do I think the vaccine helped? No, but by 2 years later they were already up to shot 4 or something and I only had #1. But after getting covid the first time and realizing it's really nothing more than another strain of flu - I put covid vaccines in the same category with flu vaccines - I don't get them. The reason being I can count on one hand the number of times I had the flu or covid the last 30 years. It's not worth the trouble to go get the shot when it's such a rare occurrence and generally is not a problem even if I do contract it.


  28. by oldedude on March 8, 2026 6:24 pm
    Obviously that's not part of the thread.


  29. by Indy! on March 8, 2026 7:36 pm

    Funny take since it's right there in the same thread with all your useless replies. 🤔


  30. by oldedude on March 9, 2026 9:03 am
    Okay.
    Agreed, I just so used to you being totally off track I blew it off.

    After reading it, I am the same regarding COVID and flu. I "think" I've had the flue twice since COVID started, could have been "COVID" but it's still something that goes away after a couple of days. And with having the kids around, I'm not the one that gets sick too much.

    And this is from a person that's had a huge number of smallpox vaxes (the last time I got 30 something jabs), along with plague, Anthrax, and several more that we truly needed at the time. And ARE really bad.

    I didn't see that the COVID/ Flu shots did any good when our friends were "super vaxer's" and still got it multiple times.


  31. by Donna on March 9, 2026 9:45 am

    Actually the COVID vax saved the lives of millions of people. How could you not know that?


  32. by HatetheSwamp on March 9, 2026 11:35 am

    "Actually the COVID vax saved the lives of millions of people.:

    How can you possibly know that?


  33. by Navy2711 on March 11, 2026 3:04 am

    Belief in Invisible Sky Daddy and scientific illiteracy tend to go hand in hand. People like this are such a drain on society.


  34. by HatetheSwamp on March 11, 2026 3:34 am

    Science?

    Is built on data.

    As I experienced COVID,... and, BTW, my mother, who suffered from COPD, was among the first to die with COVID, every aspect of the pandemic was so politicized...

    (... the wokes and progressives here on SS went crazy... as did the whole Doddering Old Fool's regime...

    ... people who care about SCIENTIFIC truth, are baffled.


    But, Navy. if you have access to reliable data, please.


  35. by oldedude on March 11, 2026 4:26 am
    Ditto.

    Also to Farante- First question. If getting "vaxxed" is guaranteed immunity, and you got "vaxxed" why the fuck do you care what I do? You're not going to get the virus, right? And we already know you don't give a shit about other people, so there's that.

    And you have that untested vaccine for a man-made virus the Chinese developed to test a "theory." The same vaccine at least a couple of members of the US government made tens of millions of dollars off of it because they were tied to the testing. And that pedojoe pre-emptively "pardoned" so they couldn't get charged.[1][2]

    AND the vaccine was made too fast for the typical safety vaccines have to go through. So now, they're getting to the reactions of untested vaccines you want mandatory that didn't really make a difference (well, other than the reactions).

    And lets not forget the skewed numbers coming from hospitals because the government paid extra money to take covid patients, so The hospitals just checked the box that patients were "covid" if they were or not because they got a lot more bucks for covid patients.[3]


    nypost.com
    newsweek.com
    factually.co


  36. by HatetheSwamp on March 11, 2026 5:18 am

    Bang on, OD.

    Exactly!


  37. by meagain on March 11, 2026 9:19 am
    OD! You are blind, deaf, and stupid. Just not dumb.

    The two vaccines each were tested on more than 40,000 subjects over months, and a six month follow up after administering was held. They were not approved until the testing was complete. The only difference was that they were approved quickly because of the urgency instead of joining the queue.

    No after effects are happening that were not expected.

    A vaccinated person can contract the virus. It just will not be severe or life threatening.

    Anyone who does not vacccinate is a selfish, dangerous fool who and will be responsible for the failure to end the spread. 95% would have brought herd immunity and it would have been over by now. Instead, it is still around strongly: still killing people.

    Measles is now making a come-back and hurting mostly children. Malaria also was, in Canada, at least, eliminated. Now it is coming back because of the anti-vax idiocy. Whooping cough, too. Hepatitis B. God knows where this is going to end. Back to the the 19th. century and shorter lives.


  38. by oldedude on March 11, 2026 9:22 am
    I did some additional research on this. There may be a link between the vaxes and a constant state of excess cortisol when looking at TPS. Which may also a part of actually having PTSD. The two have some common themes, especially the part about consistent anger, lashing out and on edge continually that leads to violence and suicides in a lot of veterans. That would actually make a lot of sense (the elevated cortisol). When I get blood drawn by the VA, that's actually part of the panel they have, which is also interesting.


  39. by meagain on March 11, 2026 12:28 pm
    There is a link, but its only real effect is to somewhat reduce the effectiveness of the vaccine. Usually, it is a temporary one. The anxiety part is pre jab fear.


  40. by oldedude on March 12, 2026 10:24 am
    I absolutely disagree. Knowing many (in the hundreds) of non vaxers, that['s never come up. It's all about the poisons in them the government isn't talking about, and the payoffs to politicians to clear them is the reason. If you can't take a shot, you;re a true snowflake. And the issue with the contents are coming to be true in some cases. That's the issue. People are saying that if one is bad, they all are. Or at least not "safe" to take. Like I've said several times before. I've taken a few hundred jabs, from Choleria, to small pox, to anthrax, plague, and many others. Most of these I willingly took these because of where we were. It's just too dangerous NOT to take them in those areas. And with NOT taking vaxes come responsibilities. And for the government to close houses of worshi0, and leave tittie bars open (knowing there is skin to skin contact, etc) is stupid. Especially with our first amendment.


  41. by meagain on March 12, 2026 11:19 am
    O.D! You are an idiot. I have finally and reluctantly forced myself to admit that. There is nothing in the MRNA vaccine that can be construed in any way as a poison. In that sense, it is safer than any other and is the reason that there are no major side effects. Don't give me the baloney about you knowing hundreds.

    There is not one documented case of death from the vaccine while millions world wide died from not having it. An estimated 500,000 in the US alone.

    It is not spread through skin contact. If you were still up to it, you could have enjoyed a normal sex life. Just keep your hands away from faces. And your mouth, to. Although I suspect your mouth is too big to avoid it. Places of worship were dangerous places. Handling rails and hymn books would have been very risky behaviour.


Go To Top

Comment on: "The link between COVID vaxes and anxiety disorders"


* Anonymous comments are subject to approval before they appear. Cookies Consent Policy & Privacy Statement. All Rights Reserved. SelectSmart® is a registered trademark. | Contact SelectSmart.com | Advertise on SelectSmart.com | This site is for sale!

Find old posts & articles

Articles by category:

SelectSmart.com
Report spam & abuse
SelectSmart.com home page