 I'm Miguel Clifford. I look like a very healthy person, but I got COVID. Well, it was one morning I got up, I was coughing a lot, and I started sweating. So my people decided to tell me, well, you should go to Tapio and get a PCR test done. I was a little hard headed. I thought it was just a normal, a little cold because I must have slept with the AC or something. So then I still decided to go. When I went in, Dr. King, after the test, he called me and put me to sit down. When I sat down to my arm, I have some sad news that he tested positive for COVID. I was like, wow. I got the staff on the Saturday afternoon about 1.32 o'clock. They examined me. They took my pressure, my pulse, everything. Then they put me in the room. They told me, I cannot get out of the room. Anything I need, I have to call the reception. They're going to bring it. People are going to attend to me. So I should be fine. I say, OK. I spent Saturday Sunday. Monday, the cough started getting worse. I had a diarrhea, which was, I couldn't control. After my cough, I would pass out on me. So I called the nurse. I told her that I'm coughing heavy. So kind of give me something for the coughing and for the diarrhea and the pain, because the pain I'm having. And I'm lying down because I'm on the one way in the room. I'm sweating for about five hours straight. Sweating, sweating, wipe myself. Take out the tissue, bring it. Put it outside and open the door slightly to get dry. Take another one. And then they called me to me, OK, the doctor prescribed me something for me. So if I could get someone to come and buy it for me, no problem. I called my niece. She lives in Rodney Bay. She went to pick it up. She bought it. She dropped it off. They dropped it off in the room. Some inhalers and some antibiotic and stuff. Cough syrup. I started taking it. About two days after that, I started feeling... The coughing was getting worse. So I was on the phone with a friend. And she told me, but Miguel told me, you're wheezing. I said, what's wheezing? She said, like, you gasping for air. I said, really? She said, yes. But you're talking to me like, OK. I said, nah, man, I'm fine. She said to me, no, Miguel, you have a problem breathing. She told me later this evening, when the doctor's on an assist pass, I tell him that you have a little problem breathing to hear what they're going to say. And then the assist pass at seven, a little after seven, they take my temperature. When they checked me, they realized that my oxygen was low in my blood. They didn't tell me, OK, they're going to have the doctor to come and check me out. I do hear from them again. I call them and they tell me, they've got an ambulance. It's on its way, so it will be there shortly. So I got myself ready. I pack up my stuff. I take a little shower and I waited for them. Then they called me about 11, 13, going up to 12. So I'm like, the ambulance is there. Can I make it to the lobby? I told them, no, if they have a wheelchair, they didn't have a wheelchair. I said, OK, I'm coming. I asked God for the decision because I was weak. So I walked out of the room. I walked towards the lobby. I made them at the lobby. They put me on the stretcher. They take my vitals again before I left. They put oxygen on me and then they took me to the hospital. When I got to the hospital, like I got to the hospital in time. At the minute I reached there, there's doctors on me, oxygen, and they start putting things on my chest. They checked my heart. They gave me blood thinner because they told me I was having blood clot. I could get a heart attack. And they started giving me medication. They put me on drips. And that's when they said I spent two days in the ward nine. And then they took me to a lower room because they told me that I could start breathing because oxygen became lesser. Because the pressure that they gave me when I got there, I realized the pressure got a little lesser. So they told me that I have to breathe on my own so that it would send me to a lower room. While I was in the lower room, I had a couple of complications with my white blood cells and red blood cells. They wasn't balancing off. They gave me a lot of antibiotics to bring out. And I never had that problem before. I never had had problem before. I never had blood problem. And then I spent 16 days at the hospital. The only people I got contacted at home that got the COVID was my wife and my two kids. None of my friends that I was around didn't get it. I up to there like today, I don't know how I got it. I don't feel through money because I didn't follow the money. I don't feel somewhere I go and somebody touch me. I don't know. I always have my mask, I always have it. All my figures are on sanitizer. Sanitize myself 24-7. On my home, everywhere, the whole business, everywhere I have sanitizer. So I don't know why I pick it up. So it's so easy to pick it up and you don't know. Until a couple of days, then you start feeling sick.