>>76575086 (OP)
the serious answer is that it the 'vaccine' wasn't consistent enough for anyone to even answer this question. The mRNA programmed random cells in your body to produce random amounts of spike protein. If these were all safe cells, and quickly eliminated after producing small amounts of spike, then you had the early symptoms of the mRNA and got over them and are fine now. Likewise if the original promise of isolating the effect to some upper arm muscle tissue hadn't been a lie then the vaccine would only be ineffective (because it targets the an extremely mutable part of the virus) and only weaken your immune system against future covid variants (because it excessively focuses your immune system against a long-dead strain), but you wouldn't still have the heart attack risk. Assuming that the freaks still hyping this disease aren't wrong about covid itself causing lots of heart damage. If they're right about that, you're still worse off from the vaccine because of your increased vulnerability to endemic covid, and should take extra precautions: go outside more and enjoy the sun, avoid stagnant air in the winter, and take vitamins to support your immune system.
If your randomly mRNA'd cells included more serious cells like heart tissue, or if your immune system is still attacking your tissues, then you should already know how bad you're having it. If you had mRNA'd cells producing spike protein for months and months then that probably sucked for you but it should be over now.
If you want to be happy about this, mRNA's a cool technology and maybe some evolution of it will do a lot of good one day. This mass (completely unnecessary and very poorly controlled) medical trial could've gone better, but your sacrifice still marginally contributed to a bright future.
Also you could've gotten saline, or your batch could've gotten too hot and already been dead by the time it was injected. If you're not dying you should know.
+at least there's no zombie apocalypse!