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Friday, June 29, 2012
Laughing and Crying
Laugh and Cry
This week has been quite a roller-coaster
emotionally for me.
Our son had a job interview in
Phoenix. He was excited and went with
the frame of mind that he had the job.
Our daughter-in-law went with him-all on his given days off. We had “custody” of the grand pups.
They stayed with our daughter and
surprised (read that scared the pants off) our nephews by hiding behind
furniture and having them find them.
“Grandma, Uncle Adam and Auntie Sam scared
us and we screamed!”
Our daughter was thrilled to have her kid
brother-if only for the brief 48 hours.
She wanted him to get the job as much as he wanted to get it. Sarah’s need for us all to move closer has been
quite clear from the start.
His interview was Wednesday morning-they
planned on leaving right afterwards to come pick up the dogs.
But his wish came true and he wound up
staying at interview #1 for 2 hours and then going straight into #2 for another
2 hours. The job offer was made and his
starting date is July 9th.
He sounds happier and more relaxed than
I’ve heard him in over a year. Let’s
face it, working 100 hours a week and then told that it isn’t near enough is
not exactly music to any employees ears.
Our daughter-in-law will remain here with
us until the condo is sold and her job ends at the end of summer.
I’m thrilled for them and missing them
already. I’m happy at my son sounding
happy and crying because I know that now both my kids and my adopted kids will
no longer be either down the street or even in the state.
And to make matters worse, my husband
wishes he could sell our home and join them in their new home state as well.
It’s not that I don’t want to be there
with them-I really do. But when you have
health conditions that require as many meds as I do-all of them unaffordable
without group insurance-even with Medicare (that is a whole other blog, but I’m
not through steaming about that enough to type without breaking my keyboard
over yet) to “help” out, it paralyzes you in fear about the 90 new policy activation
that most employers have in their hiring practices.
I seemed to have done right by my
kids-they are fearless and jump into any and all changes without the need for a
net. I don’t know how they got to be so
brave, but my admiration is strong on that subject.
On more of a financial but just as
emotional roller-coaster, last week my husband and I were running errands and
we decided since we were passing by the local mall that we’d stop in and have
our wedding rings checked and cleaned.
We did just do it the end of April, but I had some stuff caught in my
engagement ring, so we just had everything we were wearing checked.
Since the loss of a diamond out of my
tennis bracelet last month, (it too was just checked) I’m uber-vigilant about
re-checks.
Good thing-the center prong on my
anniversary band was damaged. It was
sent in for an estimate and the jeweler called to say, “It will be $15.65.” I
repeated the amount and said to go ahead with the repair.
He called back right away and said, “You okayed
that pretty fast, so I wanted to make sure you knew it was “$1,500.65.”
“No, that is not what you said, I even
repeated the amount. Why on earth would
a prong cost that much????”
Turns out that the jeweler found a crack
in the stone.
Really?
Great, just dandy.
When I told my husband, as expected, he
informed me that my ring would now be put into the safe with my bracelet.
All of this, just when we were just
beginning to see a glimmer of sunshine.
Comments:
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Holy cow, I don't think my wife's wedding/engagement ring came to half what it would cost to repair your's. That's great about your kids getting a new lease on life. Time on this earth is too short not to have more time with those who count. Hopefully you and your hubby will find a way to keep a close relationship still.
Obamacare's not going to help with your meds?
Obamacare's not going to help with your meds?
right now, everyone from the gov. did agree on one thing: Steve's coverage is better than anything that medicare will ever provide. Abbot is picking up almost all of the tab on the Humira-we're only paying $5 a month instead of $1,400.
I suppose that his plan might help-if medicare and SSA ever actually figure out the answers to some of what should be simple questions Dave.
As for the ring-I know that it and my bracelet are "items" but it's the emotional part of it-Steve got the ring as an upgrade for me on our 21st anni and my bracelet was the 2nd upgrade for our 25th. so yes, they're things, but it was the thought and his scrimping and saving that make them both ever so much more valuable.
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I suppose that his plan might help-if medicare and SSA ever actually figure out the answers to some of what should be simple questions Dave.
As for the ring-I know that it and my bracelet are "items" but it's the emotional part of it-Steve got the ring as an upgrade for me on our 21st anni and my bracelet was the 2nd upgrade for our 25th. so yes, they're things, but it was the thought and his scrimping and saving that make them both ever so much more valuable.
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