Covid in Norway: Ongoing Normalisation of Vaxx Injuries--two telling cases of the shape of things to come
A 16 yo's heart stopped in his sleep: after air-evac, MDs diagnose myocarditis; a 27 yo experiences menstrual bleeding for 160 consecutive days: gynaecologists prescribes yet more hormones
Let’s check in briefly with the Norwegians and their Covid vaxx injuries, shall we?
16yo w/Cardiac Arrest in his Sleep
First up, a few days ago, a long-form advertisement for the Norwegian Air Ambulance (Luftambulanse) told a strange story of heroism and near-death. Appearing in Bergens Tidende, it told the moving account of 16 year-old Olav Alexander and his 17 year-old girlfriend, Andrine.
While Olav’s parents were out of town, the two teens stayed at his parents’ place—and you may not expect the following (emphases and translations mine):
17 Year-Old Andrine Feared for Her Boyfriend’s Life
When 16 Year-Old Olav Alexander Røed's Heart Went into Cardiac Arrest, She Was All By Herself
Bergens Tidende, paid For by the Norwegian Flying Doctors’ Foundation, March 2023
It is the night of 3 December last year. The two young people have gone to bed for the night. They are home alone with Olav. His parents are on a cabin trip this weekend.
He complained of chest pains earlier that evening, but we didn't think much about it.
She and her boyfriend had been in Trondheim earlier that day—a four-hour drive from their home town of Nærøysund in Nord-Trøndelag.
We drove late in the evening and night, so we were both very tired and fell asleep in the back seat. I wasn't too worried when Olav complained about the pain. I thought he was just tired.
The teenagers come home to the empty house and quickly find the bed to get a few hours of sleep. ‘I remember we had a glass of water and got into bed. Olav turns his back on me and lies down to sleep’, says Andrine.
Minutes later it sounds as if Olav can't breathe. Andrine grabs his shoulder and turns him towards her. Then she sees his eyes roll back and his lips change colour from pink to blue. What she first thought was a bad joke turns out to be bloody serious.
Andrine is all alone. She calls her boyfriend's name repeatedly and tries to make contact: ‘I'm calling the ambulance. I'm calling 113’, she screams.
My dad works as a firefighter and we've gone through first aid, but I never imagined that I would actually need it.
With the emergency services on the phone, Andrine confirms that she is doing exactly the right thing: ‘Keep doing chest compressions and hang in there. The ambulance is on its way’, they tell her over the phone.
But Andrine is already tired. She knows that the nearest ambulance station is 45 minutes away. How will she manage to hold on? It's physically very demanding to apply CPR, and her boyfriend in bed shows no signs of life.
‘We are on our way and will be there soon’, the person on the phone assures her.
When they say that, I feel a huge sense of frustration. I want to tell them to shut up, because they're not going to be here soon. They're far away and I'm all alone.
So it's a huge relief when she sees the blue lights just minutes later. The ambulance from Rørvik has been on a mission just over a kilometre away. [what are the odds…]
The paramedics spend two hours resuscitating the young boy on the bedroom floor and give him six shocks with a defibrillator. Olav's heart won't beat.
Downstairs in the bathroom, Andrine is pacing back and forth. She is terrified. She frantically tries to call Olav's parents, who are still at the cabin, blissfully unaware that their 16-year-old son is in cardiac arrest on the bedroom floor at home.
There are lots of noises, loud voices and rumbling from the bedroom. People are running up and down the stairs. The noise calms Andrine down. At least he's not dead, she thinks.
[at this point, the flow is a bit interrupted as the flying doctors are introduced; remember, this is an advertisement]
‘The most common calls we receive are for cardiac arrests, strokes, or other traumas. It's usually the elderly who need urgent help. Obviously, there is an extra element of stress when children or young people are involved’, explains 61 year-old Per Arnell, a veteran with the Luftambulanse:
Of course, we take all our alarms very seriously, but a 16-year-old in cardiac arrest really makes us sharpen our senses.
During the flight to Nærøysund, Arnell and his colleagues are trying to determine the cause of the cardiac arrest. A heart attack is unlikely in such a young boy. Could it be a cardiac arrhythmia, is it poisoning—or could it be inflammation of the heart?
When the air ambulance arrives on the scene, Olav is still unconscious in his bedroom, but his heart is beating. Arnell says that it is complicated to carry him down the narrow, steep stairs on the stretcher, but that the teamwork works well.
[I shortened the part that tells of 16 year-old Olav being airlifted to St Olav’s Hospital in Trondheim, where he was put in a coma for a few days.]
The cause of his cardiac arrest was an inflammation of the heart muscle. After a severe course of COVID-19 and months of coughing, the inflammation was allowed to develop in his chest, eventually causing his heart to fail.
Olav unfolds his shirt to reveal a red scar across his left chest. As a precaution, he has had a defibrillator inserted:
By way of segway-ing into the second piece, according to the most recent publicly available data, 103,012 teens—or 78%—of Norway’s 131,931 inhabitants aged 16-17 have received at least one dose of a modRNA Covid-19 'injection’; 29,792 teens went on and had a second dose (thankfully, only 271 took a third dose and a mere 30 a fourth one; Tab. 25, p. 62).
Myocarditis is, of course, associated with the Covid-19 injectable products; it is not associated with Covid-19 the illness, according to Peter McCullough’s assessment of a systematic review of 50 Studies with 548 hearts that did not find heart Inflammation as significant contributor to death. The review is Almamlouk et al. (2022), ‘COVID-19-Associated cardiac pathology at the postmortem evaluation: a collaborative systematic review’, Clin Microbiol Infect., Aug;28(8):1066-1075. doi: 10.1016/j.cmi.2022.03.021. Epub 2022 Mar 23. PMID: 35339672. Here’s McCullough’s clear-cut wording (my emphases):
Usual post-mortem findings of tissue edema and necrosis were reported commonly. About two thirds of hearts had SARS-CoV-2 found in the tissue. However, none of the hearts had extensive myocarditis as the cause of death…this review should be the nail in the coffin in ruling out COVID-19 illness as a cause of fatal myocarditis. [line break inserted]
Despite the virus being found in heart tissue, it was not causing significant inflammation. The explosion of fatal myocarditis by report of unexplained cardiac arrest, adjudication, and at necropsy must have another explanation than SARS-CoV-2 infection. The only new proven cause of heart damage in human populations is COVID-19 vaccination. Vaccines used in America (Pfizer, Moderna, Janssen, Novavax) have been demonstrated to cause myocarditis as published in the peer-reviewed literature.
Note that the word ‘vaccine’ (vaksin, in Norwegian) is absent from the above article about 16 year-old Olav Alexander.
Marit (27) Has Had Her Period for More Than 160 Consecutive Days
An intrauterine device (IUD) was supposed to ease her symptoms, but it had the opposite effect. Her doctors have asked her to take even more hormones.
By Rahand Bazaz for [Norwegian state broadcaster] NRK, 25 March 2023
- I feel angry, sad and scared. Really scared.
Marit Nystrøm has struggled with severe menstrual pain and heavy bleeding for several years. In October last year, the 27-year-old had a hormonal IUD inserted in the hope of reducing the pain. But the IUD has made the pain worse: ‘I have less sex drive, sore breasts and much less appetite’, she says in despair.
She has now been bleeding for more than 160 days in a row.
Nystrøm calls for more information and research on women's health and contraception. Especially the use of hormonal IUDs
It's not mentioned online that women can get their periods for so many days in a row or pain felt in the foot several days afterwards. They don't tell you anything about that.
Medicine is Always Evolving
Earlier in March, the Women's Health Committee published a recent status report on how women's health has been prioritised in recent years. Here’s Trine Aarvold, a MD at Sex and Society [sex og samfunn]:
We always want more research on both contraception and women's health. Today, we have to do a bit of trial and error, which means that some people have to try many contraceptives before they find something that works.
Sex and Society is Norway's largest centre for reproductive health and rights.
In recent years, more young women have opted out of contraceptive pills and contraceptive patches, according to the Women's Health Committee's report.
The increase is now greatest for contraceptives such as IUDs and the like. [coincidentally, as Norway re-opened about a year ago, for reasons unknown to public health authorities, the incidence of STDs like chlamydia and gonorrhoea has skyrocketed]
Aarvold believes that health professionals should provide the user with good knowledge [i.e., informed consent] about contraceptives before they start using them:
Good contraceptive counselling takes time. We see that many people have not received enough information, or that misleading information is given.
Marit’s GP Forgot to Order an MRI
Marit Nystrøm has been examined and assessed for the many diseases but doctors have so far been unable to make a diagnosis.
At the hospital in Stavanger, the 27-year-old has been told to take contraceptive pills while wearing an IUD. Nystrom’s reaction:
I'm struggling to understand why I should take more hormones.
Doctors believe that the use of contraceptive pills can reduce the pain. According to Solveig Thorarinsdottir, a senior consultant at the hospital,
According to our national guidelines, this is the most important first-line treatment we provide. Either the two in combination or a hormonal IUD for those who have adenomyosis [cell growth in the uterus].
Nystrom has also been offered to remove the IUD because of the pain, but she has been advised to wait until after an MRI scan. Yet, the doctor forgot to order it, so Nystrom has to walk longer with pain. Consultant Thorarinsdottir:
It is of course regrettable that there was no time to book an MRI scan. Trying to keep the IUD in place a little longer is in line with medical recommendations. [easy for her to say because she’s not the one in pain]
Bleeding Will Continue Until the Next Examination
The 27-year-old is in great pain every day. She wants to be an active mother of two and loves to exercise, but the pain affects her mood.
Patients with severe pain can be difficult to treat, says senior consultant Kirsten Hald at the Department of Gynaecology at Ullevål Hospital.
Finding the right dose of hormones is not always easy and there is a balance in the body that needs to be taken into account. [what if it’s not hormones Marit needs? What about the cause of her pain?]
She is confident that in the future there will be treatments personalised for each patient: 'A lot of research is being done on so-called personalised medicine, but it hasn't progressed far enough yet to be used in practice in this field.'
Marit Nystrøm can do nothing but wait:
Until the next physical, I will have to bleed all the time. [and be in pain]
Bottom Lines
Welcome to year 4 of the Covid madness.
According to official data (same source as above), there are 755,168 inhabitants in the age cohort 25-34; of these, 645,768 or 86% have received one dose of a modRNA injection, 616,322 or 82% took a second jab, and 347,035 or 46% went and got a booster jab.
It is highly likely—and almost 9 out of 10 chance—that poor Marit, too, is among the injected.
Yet, the term ‘vaccine’ is also absent from the second piece. And it would appear that Marit’s consulting physicians are also avoiding that issue while keeping the proverbial 10ft distance with a pole. I almost wonder why that may be.
Vaxx Injured Women in Legacy Media
Curiously, Norwegian legacy media did offer some insights into injuries following modRNA injections as of late. Public health officials have admitted that potentially massive menstrual bleeding is one of the side effects of the Covid injections.
Among other things, NRK reported about a 32-year-old mother who had almost continuous menstrual bleeding (?) for at least 13 months since getting ‘vaccinated’. This was recognised as ‘vaccine injury’ and ‘settled’ by the authorities with a one-off payout of 2,500 Crowns, or about US$250. Talk about adding insult to injury.
Another case involved a 25-year-old Norwegian woman who found several thumb-sized lumps of tissue in her panties that ‘came out with the menses’. However, according to the medical professionals she consulted—as NRK noted explicitly—these were ‘only’ parts of the cervix and their analysis did not suggest future fertility complications. By the way, that young woman concerned shared these pictures on her Instagram account, hence some of these can also be viewed in the NRK article [reader discretion advised]. In contrast to the article just mentioned, it remains unmentioned whether this issue is connected to the Covid injections or not.
And there was the sad case of 37 year-old Silje Annette Braa, which is as clear-cut a case of vaccine damage if there ever was one. Mother of two children with a desire for a third, the Covid injection destroyed these wishes. As NRK reports, Braa experienced ‘heavy menstrual bleeding after Covid vaccination’ [note the parallel to 27 year-old Marit] that did not end and which, ultimately, led to the 37 year-old Braa ‘having to undergo surgical removal of her uterus’.
In total, 159 Norwegian women have received reimbursement for injection-related injuries concerning menstrual complications (as of 25 Jan 2023). The total number of such reported vaccine adverse events stands at more than 15,000, of which 810 have been classified as ‘severe’ (as of 22 Nov 2022, the next ‘update’ will not be until mid-April).
It would appear that, after a brief period earlier this year when legacy media kind of reported on these issues, that we’re now entering the ‘normalisation’ of myocarditis, cardiac arrests—among 16 year-olds (!)—and the like.
Put differently: to me, the above pieces all but avoid the proverbial elephant in the room to further ‘soften’ up people’s perception that these kinds of health scares are, well, ‘normal’.
They are not.
Personally, the first thing that comes to my mind reading about these people is—a profound sadness and sorrow.
I mean, imagine, if you will, that you would like to have another child—and, upon taking these allegedly ‘safe and effective’ injections, you have to have your uterus surgically removed.
Or 16 year-old Olav Alexander who suffered a cardiac arrest and now has a defibrillator surgically inserted next to his heart. Imagine the horrors experienced by his girlfriend.
This is not normal, far from it.
While I realise the next lines may come over as ‘insensitive’, I do feel they are required:
For many reasons (I’ve written about this extensively in these pages, look for ‘Covid in Norway’), Norwegians placed enormous amounts of trust in both the government and public health officialdom. This trust was very much misplaced.
There are considerable questions concerning both the harm potential (‘safety’) and the after-effects of these injectable products. The above anecdotes are indicative of both issues, yet, as it looks, most Norwegians are blissfully unaware of the gaslighting they’re exposed to.
So far, there appears to be no out-of-the-ordinary concerns with either these injectable products nor their profile.
At some point people will wake up and connect the dots. Or they won’t. There does seem to be a way to sum up these developments:
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me again, shame on me.
The secretary of health of Puerto Rico, whom I call "Marshmallow Mengele" Mellado, admitted on the radio to being injured by the injections. He still can't see well out of one of his eyes. BUT it is better, he insisted, than getting corona! And not 15 seconds later in the interview, he said he got corona. (Based on the timeline, he was infected after all his shots.)
It's all normal! Nothing to see here! Etc.
Vaccine injured ppl must write a book for the record. Sell hardcopies on ebay or directly. Submit affidavit of fact
to local county records office, keep several for posterity. Thoughts?
Rough Sections of their book:
(1) View of health industry before and during covid
(2) Rationale for talking the medicines injection
(3) Effects upon my body
(4) How I view medical establishment now
(5) Conclusions/ Recommendations