Just because you haven't experienced any symptoms doesn't mean you won't.
The best course of action is to actually visit your doctor and get a blood test. You'll be able to know for sure whether or not any onset clotting is beginning to occur.
Remember, this starts at a microscopic level and can be induced if any of the mRNA proteins make their way into your bloodstream.
For everyone saying intramuscular delivery means you won't be affected is being misleading, because mRNA has a tendency to have a much longer half-life than what was originally reported by the media (no surprise) and can actually enact intracellular penetration, as was discovered in a more recent study about how it can alter cell lines in the liver after the mRNA traveled from the muscles into the blood stream:
https://www.mdpi.com/1467-3045/44/3/73/htm
The mRNA technology has never been compatible with the human genome once it reaches the venous system (or otherwise for anyone with a healthy immune system).
This isn't to say that you will be directly affected by it, even months later, but it's to say that you may or may not be affected by it, because if any of the proteins do commit intracellular penetration, the immune system will begin to attack them like parasites, and platelets begin to form around mRNA, treating them like parasites. It can take anywhere between weeks to months for the signs to manifest in aches, pains, or possible organ failure. Everyone's immune system is different so the reactions may be different for each person.
This is why a lot of people are getting ivermectin treatments because it's anti-parasitic, and the human body treats mRNA like a parasite. This isn't to say you will need ivermectin or that you even have any clotting occurring.
This is why it's probably best you talk to your doctor and get blood work done so you can know for sure. If nothing comes back in the tests and you feel fine then hopefully the mRNA half-life has run its course, and at worst your immune system will have taken a slight hit.
Some people are giving you bad advice here.
Just because you haven't experienced any symptoms doesn't mean you won't.
The best course of action is to actually visit your doctor and get a blood test. You'll be able to know for sure whether or not any onset clotting is beginning to occur.
Remember, this starts at a microscopic level and can be induced if any of the mRNA proteins make their way into your bloodstream.
For everyone saying intramuscular delivery means you won't be affected is being misleading, because mRNA has a tendency to have a much longer half-life than what was originally reported by the media (no surprise) and can actually enact intracellular penetration, as was discovered in a more recent study about how it can alter cell lines in the liver after the mRNA traveled from the muscles into the blood stream: https://www.mdpi.com/1467-3045/44/3/73/htm
The mRNA technology has never been compatible with the human genome once it reaches the venous system (or otherwise for anyone with a healthy immune system).
This isn't to say that you will be directly affected by it, even months later, but it's to say that you may or may not be affected by it, because if any of the proteins do commit intracellular penetration, the immune system will begin to attack them like parasites, and platelets begin to form around mRNA, treating them like parasites. It can take anywhere between weeks to months for the signs to manifest in aches, pains, or possible organ failure. Everyone's immune system is different so the reactions may be different for each person.
This is why a lot of people are getting ivermectin treatments because it's anti-parasitic, and the human body treats mRNA like a parasite. This isn't to say you will need ivermectin or that you even have any clotting occurring.
This is why it's probably best you talk to your doctor and get blood work done so you can know for sure. If nothing comes back in the tests and you feel fine then hopefully the mRNA half-life has run its course, and at worst your immune system will have taken a slight hit.