Jessica Sutta, once part of the multi-platinum girl group The Pussycat Dolls, remembers the moment she got her first Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at a CVS Pharmacy in California.
She recounted her life-changing experience of pain, confusion, and advocacy after the vaccine left her injured in an interview with the Defender.
“I remember when he injected me, I made a joke because it ripped out through my arm — it was like one of the most intense, horrible feelings,” she said. “And I looked at him and said, ‘Am I going to turn into the Hulk?’”
Sutta chose to get the COVID-19 shot in August 2021, convinced it was the right action for her community.
“I was very much focused on mainstream media, believing everything they were telling us, believing all the propaganda,” she told the outlet.
Sutta woke up to a muscle spasm in her back, difficulty breathing, and brain fog that left her feeling dizzy and unable to think clearly three days after receiving her first shot.
She spent a day in the hospital, but the medical staff couldn’t provide a conclusive diagnosis, the Defender notes. They dismissed the pains as the cause of her symptoms, despite Sutta mentioning the recent injection to her doctors.
“They sent me home with antibiotics,” she stated to the outlet. “I didn’t know it was a vaccine injury for at least a month. I thought it was MS (multiple sclerosis).”
Sutta still eventually proceeded with her second dose of the vaccine three weeks later.
This second shot initiated another series of symptoms, including double vision, burning sensations in her rib cage, muscle fatigue, heightened skin sensitivity, and joint pain.
“It was just a living nightmare,” she recalled.
Sutta felt frustrated and disheartened navigating the medical system, as she faced difficulty in finding answers for her worsening condition, with doctors swiftly dismissing her concerns.
Sutta returned to the hospital due to unbearable burning sensations in May 2022.
“It was ripping and coursing through my ribcage up and down my spine. I couldn’t sleep. I felt like I was dying,” she told the Defender.
The former girl group member eventually connected with a neurologist who asked if she had received the vaccine after hearing of her symptoms. However, when she later consulted him, he became reticent and refused to discuss the matter further.
Sutta began sharing her story with close friends, one of whom urged her to watch a video featuring testimonies of vaccine injuries.
The video upset her so much that she couldn’t even finish watching it, eventually realizing the deception surrounding vaccines and how society had turned its back on the vaccine-injured.
The turning point arrived when Sutta discovered React19, a nonprofit organization committed to assisting those affected by vaccine injuries. She would later become the organization’s creative director.
“I was able to find React19 from a Senate roundtable with Dr. Robert Malone and Dr. Peter McCullough — all these wonderful humans — and Brianne Dressen,” Sutta recounted.
“And I was like, ‘Oh my god, I’m not alone.’” she added.
Sutta felt compelled to speak out about her experience with vaccine injury. She recognized the risks of going public in an industry that largely supported the vaccine narrative but remained committed to advocating for legislative action in California to assist those injured by vaccines.
Sutta firmly believes that raising awareness outweighs any potential backlash, however. And now stresses the importance of “pushing this into the mainstream and letting people see the real truth of the adverse reactions in real time.”
The post Former ‘Pussycat Doll’ Jessica Sutta Speaks Out About COVID Vaccine Injury: ‘A Living Nightmare’ appeared first on Resist the Mainstream.
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Author: Jordyn M.
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