Connecting the dots
Nov. 16th, 2005 08:57 amSo, as I'm falling asleep last night I finally figure out where my cellphone minutes have gone... My plan has free calling between 9p.m. and 7 a.m. on weekdays and all day on weekends. I don't call Mom every day but most days. And some days she just goes on and on and on and on and on... When I was commuting, I always called on my way in. And I was always at my desk no later than 6:45. So all the calls were free.
Now that I'm here, my routine has been to wake up and read the paper and read LJ and have coffee and kind of work up to the call which then lands it squarely on the money side of 7 a.m. She seemed sharper than usual this morning so I explained this to her and told her that if I hadn't called before 10 her time, it would be an email only day unless there was an emergency. She got it. And even asked if she called me did it count against my minutes. Excellent question and the answer is yes but I told her no because I don't want her to not call if she wants to.
Problem solved.
For those of you in other countries who might not be aware of our federal government's latest attempt... They have created a plan for offering senior citizens some insurance coverage for prescription drugs. The plan, created by the federal government, is actually administered by a bazillion different competing insurance companies - which companies and which plans are available varies widely across the country. None of them are easy to understand. The application process started yesterday. If you apply before the end of the year your benefits start in January. If you don't apply by May 15 of next year theree is a substantial financial penalty.
My current theory is that the entire thing is a conspiracy plot launched by the IRS (tax collectors) in their never ending quest to make it appear as if they are not the spawn of satan.
I saw a guy being interviewed on NBC news the other night about the plan. He was with the agency that created it. The interviewer noted that the plan and process were incredibly complicated and that a lot of seniors were confused because it was so complicated. He said:
Now that I'm here, my routine has been to wake up and read the paper and read LJ and have coffee and kind of work up to the call which then lands it squarely on the money side of 7 a.m. She seemed sharper than usual this morning so I explained this to her and told her that if I hadn't called before 10 her time, it would be an email only day unless there was an emergency. She got it. And even asked if she called me did it count against my minutes. Excellent question and the answer is yes but I told her no because I don't want her to not call if she wants to.
Problem solved.
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For those of you in other countries who might not be aware of our federal government's latest attempt... They have created a plan for offering senior citizens some insurance coverage for prescription drugs. The plan, created by the federal government, is actually administered by a bazillion different competing insurance companies - which companies and which plans are available varies widely across the country. None of them are easy to understand. The application process started yesterday. If you apply before the end of the year your benefits start in January. If you don't apply by May 15 of next year theree is a substantial financial penalty.
My current theory is that the entire thing is a conspiracy plot launched by the IRS (tax collectors) in their never ending quest to make it appear as if they are not the spawn of satan.
I saw a guy being interviewed on NBC news the other night about the plan. He was with the agency that created it. The interviewer noted that the plan and process were incredibly complicated and that a lot of seniors were confused because it was so complicated. He said:
Well, life is complicated. They should ask their pharmacist or their family for help.Ya gotta love bureaucrats who have never seen the real world. We have actually had a good bit of fairly good explanatory coverage of the thing. But so much of the detail is dependent on the specifics in the various regions of the country that what works here is Washington ain't gonna fly in South Carolina. But I have done my homework. Mom has a list of her drugs from Mindy, the pharmacist. And Mindy told her to send me round when we were ready to apply and she'd help us insure we had it right.
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