Shingles can (but rarely) occur as it is the chicken pox virus that remains in the body 'dormant' after childhood chickenpox. FYI, shingles is only contagious if a sufferer gets into close contact with someone who DID NOT have chickenpox as a child. When shingles erupts in later life, it usually happens when the immune system has been weakened by some disease/illness. We all know by now from our internet resesarch that these COVID jabs are killing off the T-cells in the immune system. Although most cases of the so-called 'monkeypox' thus far have been reported primarily within the homosexual community (not sure why), I think the immune system degradation premise may indicate the shots will eventually cause cases to occur outside that population. JMHO
When I had my case of shingles, my doctor's first comment upon diagnosing was "What could be knocking your immune system down to this degree? You're not sick." I told him it might be my father's 2005 death just months before (we were very close) and my very high-strung, controlling, hyper-intelligent, overbearing brother in Seattle trying to micromanage via telephone (almost daily) how I should handle my mother's emerging medical issues (dementia, which he denied she even had!) as well as her changing daily living/emotional/loneliness issues (she lived 3 hours away from me at AF Village, San Antonio). Stress levels for me at that time were extremely high. My doctor got labwork results showing cortosol levels way above the highest range number. Couldn't change my brother, and because I loved him, I put up with his overbearing, intense personality all my life. He passed away in 2014 from a very rare form of blood cancer. My stress levels went down within a couple months of his death, which my husband quickly noticed.