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‘This is what you’re in for’: Watertown woman breaks down onset of COVID-19 symptoms

“I wanted to make it clear that even if you’re relatively young, or healthy, or like me and very lucky, you can still get very sick.”

Kat Powers wearing a mask she made in case she gets called to go for a coronavirus test before her quarantine is over. Courtesy of Kat Powers

Wash your hands. Stay inside. That’s the message a Watertown woman says she hopes people learn from her experience in a two-week quarantine with symptoms of COVID-19.Kat Powers broke down in detail her experience with the symptoms of the novel coronavirus on Twitter, urging people to not dismiss the possibility of getting the illness even if they are healthy. “If you go out, if you don’t wash your hands, if you think you’ll just get sick and ride it out, this is what you’re in for,” she wrote. 

Powers, a former journalist, told Boston.com that she is on a list to get tested for the virus. The doctors she has spoken to have told her there aren’t enough tests to determine exactly how many people have the virus. 

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“They’re calling us ‘presumed cases,’” she wrote in an email. “I can tell you all those symptoms I ticked off on my thread match up with the COVID-19 list. From what I understand I hit all of them except for the fact that I don’t recall ever losing sense of smell.”

The 50-year-old said she decided to share her experience when she was at home, coughing “so hard I was unable to make it down the stairs to get the mail,” and saw friends and family posting about going out.

“This virus is no joke, and I wanted to make it clear that even if you’re relatively young, or healthy, or like me and very lucky, you can still get very sick,” she said. “That sickness is avoidable at the moment if you just plant your bottom on the couch and have a video chat instead of going on that date or meeting up for a pickup basketball game.”

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“I also have a bit of a background in communications, and I know I did not understand some of the early messages in ‘social distancing’ and how long we might be expected to stay at home,” she added. “I mean, seriously, ‘social distancing’ sounds like an abstinence pitch from the ’80s. I wanted to be very clear what the consequences are for the relatively healthy person who chooses not to stay at home and gets sick.”

Powers said she knows people are afraid. 

“Now that I’ve had the virus and I’m recovering, I don’t want anyone else to go through all the symptoms I’ve detailed,” she said. “I’d rather they be informed than afraid.”

She’s not sure whether people will heed her warning or if she was “preaching to the choir” of people who may already be washing their hands and staying indoors. But she’s hopeful she may have convinced at least one person to stay at home.

“If she/he/they didn’t infect three people, it was worth it,” she wrote. 

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<h2>What are the symptoms of coronavirus, and how is it treated?</h2>

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