I line up for a covid jab just as soon as the authorities say I'm eligible for one. You should too, if you can. (I have friends who can't get jabbed because they're immunosuppressed. I selfishly do not want them to get sick.)
I get boosted when the time comes and still wear a mask in stores and the like. I live in an area with a fairly immunocompromised population... seems like the least I can do.
Thankfully there are no restrictions for COVID-19 vaccines for those that are immunocompromised.
Unfortunately, the vaccines don't provide much protection in those cases.
We're all in this together, and we need to protect one another.
In terms of my own risk (as someone massively disabled by flu in 1997), I've stopped worrying about whether other people have their covid jags, except as a sign of whether they take the pandemic seriously. What I want is for them to wear FFP3/N95 respirators, open windows, and have air filtration.
I thought the jags still don't make much difference to transmission rates? They're mainly for protecting the people who have them, and that is fine. Covid is frequently massively damaging, even fatal, for healthy people.
(Mine is delayed because they're sorting out a different type for me, arggh.)