Showing posts with label health insurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health insurance. Show all posts

Thursday, May 25, 2017

The Seventh Season

The year is now 2017. I am in my seventh season at Parks and Recreation.  I am now vested in the Public Employee Retirement system.  I no longer for the schools as an educational assistant.  Given the deep and long-lasting snows of the winter, I was relieved not to have to worry about answering the phone.

Doug and I now live in an apartment.

Years ago, when this complex was being built, we would drive by, the joke was that when all went south, that's where we would moved to.  And here we are.  It has a nice lawn behind it, that we look over when we view the canal and the landscape out to the north, northwest to Awbrey Butte.  No windows look at our place, except for cars speeding by on the Parkway.  I've tried to look at our place when driving by, and all you can see is that the place exists, so we have privacy.  Inside, there are angles, as there were at the house, which is nice and comforting.  There's a porch for plants and the rocky horse that Lindsey bought long before I entered the family.  We are at the far end of the complex, where we can see our garage, and where few people drive.  The south windows look down on lawn and the parking lot and over to windows and porches of other buildings.  I've used the exercise room, visited with friends in the lounge, and swam in the pool.

The cats went to a friend's place, and she let them live there.  Toby never did go into the house, but hung around like a feral cat, keeping a schedule of showing up in the afternoon to eat, and eventually didn't show up any more.  I had a dream of him, which was so real, I could feel his weight in my arms, and I held him and petted him, and he turned his face to me, and I could see that he was dead.

Bobsworth died a few days after the dream.  Soon after the move there, he worked his way into the house, made himself at home, demanded to be pushed around on the floor while lying on his back. Bossy thing.  I saw him weekly.  When he died, he was found under the dining room table.  I got a cardboard box for his coffin and took him to the Humane Society.


My husband is working.  The company accommodates his physical limitations, and we have health insurance and are working on our savings.  I am very grateful for the Judsons and others who mentored his becoming an electrician.  The construction here in Bend is booming, and there is a shortage of skilled labor such as his, so we are hoping to get through this period of time okay.

My daughters became adults.  One has her master's degree, two are married, and the first grandchild is expected tomorrow.  One lives with her husband in Virginia, the other two live in Utah.  They are healthy and doing well.  Our mothers are still alive, still able to physically take care of themselves with some small assistance from our siblings who are there with them--driving them to appointments and such.

 I still have my medical bills, but they are down now to less than $3,000.  I anticipate having them all paid off by the July 31st paycheck. To celebrate, I will bring doughnuts to work, maybe a fruit tray too, and make sure that the trailer gets a box.

Some lunchtimes, I'm at Pine Nursery North, where there is a fishing pond.  I sit in my rig and watch the water as I eat.  Some days the water ripples a little, some days there's a breeze that makes crests that run across the surface, and some days the water looks flat and grey, reflecting the clouds, and some days it's blue and white, with an occasional splash from a fish.

We are in a good place. What more could I want, but this?  Today I am wealthy.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Day 43 Not skiing

Today I decide to be wealthy.

There was a night ski special today, and I went to it, but I stayed in the lodge and read a book while friends and my husband skied.  I don't have any insurance to cover me if I fell and broke my leg, and I'm not that experienced on skis.  (Last time I went, I had trouble getting off the chair lift, and it had to be stopped almost every time.)

So I read a novel about a girl who was a refugee from Viet Nam who moved to Alabama.  The scene outside the windows was very lovely, and skiers commented on how icy the snow was.


We have friends staying the night.  Being able to have friends stay comfortable in your home is a very  nice.

Today I decide to be wealthy.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Day 23

Today I decide to be wealthy.

I called the unemployment center to find out what I needed to do to continue my unemployment benefits, and found out that I just need to have with me my information of October, November and December employment, and do it on the internet.

I did inventory today at a store that sells decorating supplies--knick knacks, furniture, garden art, candles, silk flowers, stuff that looks antique, but was copied off of old early 1900's furniture, very chunky.  According to the book, step #4, this money would be put directly into savings.  Sorry, it's going to the current crop of bills.

Wealthy people pay their bills.  I finally quit putting off talking to the doctor's office about a bill that I got in December 2011, for a visit I'd had in August 2010.  I'd gone in, got my heart listened to and my blood-pressure taken, and told to get my blood checked and a mammogram and come back.  I went to get the blood test, and the insurance refused to pay for it, as it put it to the $1000 deductible, and I knew that it wouldn't pay for the mammogram as it didn't when I have one a few years earlier.  It turned out that everything was fine, except my blood sugar was high. I didn't have a job to even have the hope of being able to pay for anything extra, as I was already being drained by the health insurance, so I didn't go back, and I didn't get a bill until December 2011.  Dr. K. has been very good to our family, and so I called, found out the amount, and arranged to pay for it in $5 increments.  I think that the new billing system, which used to be in his office but is now contracted out, sent the bill, and that he probably didn't even know that they'd done it.

Today I decide to be wealthy.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Day 10

Today I decide to be wealthy.

I read an article in the Ensign, about the Lord's Prayer, and specifically the sentence, "give us this day our daily bread."  It talked about our needs, and how during the 40 years in the wilderness, that the Children of Israel received manna, and once they were in the Promised Land, they were expected to grow their own food (with the Lord's help--they planted, toiled, harvested, and were expected to tithe and share with others,  in the Lord's way).  One of the points of the article being that we don't know from day to day in our lives what it's going to be.

When I was at my daughter's college graduation this summer, one of the speakers said, "All the money in the world belongs to God," and, after promises of prospering, he said, "Prosperity has nothing to do with money."

So I don't know where I'm going to be financially when this is all done, but I do have my health, my family, my kids are home for a few days, my extended family is doing fine, I received Christmas money enough to pay household bills (but not enough to pay the health insurance, so that's going bye-bye until I can get a job that either has it or that I can afford to pay out of pocket, or the Oregon Health Plan), and food from the church.  

I know that the Children of Israel got so used to the manna that they complained about it.

How can you complain about manna?  (I really don't want to know the answer to that.)

Today I decide to be wealthy.