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Does COVID mRNA Vaccine Cause Anxiety and Depression?

  • Writer: Gary Moller
    Gary Moller
  • Aug 13
  • 2 min read
Person in white shirt curled up on bed in dim room, next to dried flowers. Mood appears calm or introspective.

My answer is a resounding yes.


You don't need a medical degree to work this out — just a dose of honesty and common sense.


If a person suddenly feels their heart is about to stop, the natural response is panic. That's extreme anxiety. I know that if it happened to me, my mind and body would go into overdrive — because that's how we're wired to survive. To suggest to a woman that she is suffering "vaccine aniety" is medically negligent.


If a person becomes so tired and exhausted that getting from the bedroom to the couch is all they can manage, that's depressing. Not "a bit of low mood" – but the real, gut-wrenching kind of depression that comes with the loss of vitality and independence.


If a parent realises — too late — that they agreed to their child receiving the "miracle medicine" and it harmed them, then deep unhappiness, even guilt, is an entirely normal human reaction. That's not a mental health disorder — that's a natural, painful reckoning.


And then there's the science. These injections make the body produce spike protein. That spike protein can circulate to the brain. Neuroinflammation is not a fringe theory — it's been documented in a range of neurological conditions. Inflammation in the brain can alter mood, impair cognition, and trigger anxiety or depression. This is basic neurobiology.


Alex Berenson recently pointed out that mRNAs are highly inflammatory. Inflammation, and auto-inflammation are increasingly linked to psychiatric symptoms. So, while the official line is that there's "no evidence," the reality is that there's both a plausible mechanism and thousands of lived experiences to back it up.


When your heart races, your energy collapses, or your brain is inflamed, you will feel anxious. You will feel depressed. That's not a conspiracy — that's physiology.


I rest my case.

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