I suppose better because I didn't realise, until my GP told me, that I had it. I was told to isolate for 7 days. Which was the rule back then.
Back in March and April the emphasis was different. I had all the symptoms we know now, apart from the continuous cough, but they weren't showing in the way I expected. I thought you would get them all at once, I thought I would be bed ridden and coughing all the time.
What happened first was the headaches, as if I had a massive hangover every morning thatblasted all day, but I hadnt been drinking at all. Back then this was not a symptom. Then I had a very noticable loss of smell and taste. Again not a symptom at the time. Then I had breathlessness but it only lasted about 12 hours but again I thought someone with covid had to feel like that for days, and with a coniltinous cough. I also had very noticable fatigue, I was falling asleep 2 times a day, even though I'd had a really good nights sleep. Very very unusual for me. The symptoms came one after the other, but I had expected that they would happen all at the same time. One of the reasons my GP said, over the phone, I probably had it was because I was in a an area where at the time a lot people had it, 2 of neighbours, different households, sadly died of it. It was also at a time, March/April, that its now estimated when 100,000 people a day were catching it
I suppose I felt a little bit safer for a time afterwards but it doesn't make me feel safer now because there are reports that immunity wanes and might only last 6 months at the most