Monthly Archives: March 2012

I Have the Best Doctor Ever!

I just wanted to give a shout out to my doctor, Dr. Deborah Solomon, who has taken care of me medically since 2003, despite all my unhealthy living and ups and downs.  She always takes the time to explain things, to show support, and genuinely cares.  Her staff is pretty amazing too.  I would recommend you all use her as well – but then it would be harder for me to get appointments if she gets really busy.

As some of you know, my latest health challenge is asceptic necrosis, probably caused by the steroids I took for years for asthma.  Luckily, they have non steroidal stuff now that I am on and I have lost fifty pounds.  I have another fifty to go.  Unluckily, the steroids caused bone death in my left hip and femur.  I was waiting on the results for my right hip and could not get them.  I wanted the best surgeon in town, but could not see him until late April.  So, I go to Dr. Solomon and voila, while I am there she gets my results from the other doctor, and my right hip is fine.  Then she calls and gets me an appointment with the surgeon I want – for 90 minutes after I leave her office.

She is also taking care of my pain with meds until I can get the hip fixed.  In an era where medical professionals are mostly rude and give you the bums rush, it is so refreshing to have a great doctor who will take their time to actually give you high quality care.  My doctor in 2002 through Aetna was horrible, so I won’t mention their name.  I was lucky from 1989 to 2001 to have Dr. Richard Alm with Cigna, who was also a good doctor.  They say when you move somewhere to get yourself a good doctor, a good auto mechanic, and a good lawyer.  I have one at least.

This is not my own hip, but mine looks similar in the MRI:

Note the nice round white bone on the left – that is normal, like my right femur.  The one on the right of the picture, all black and dead, that is kind of what my left one looks like.   It actually hurts more than you would think.  Kind of like a broken tooth, but all over your hip and back.  I should have the surgery some time in the late March to early May period.  Wish me luck.  No more metal detectors for me – all pat downs.  Too bad they don’t have super models at the TSA…

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Cute Dog Posts for Your Monday Blues

Try not to saw Awww while looking at the following cute dogs.  Swinging, slip and slide, footsie bathing, looking cute, and I’m the King of The World Titanic moment relived…

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I Filled my Tank and My Car Doubled in Value!

I am not that old, but I remember 23 cents a gallon gas where a guy would pump it for you, wash your windshield, check your tires and oil, and give you six times green stamps to boot.  I first saw the joke “I Filled my Tank and My Car Doubled in Value!” on the Red Green Show, a strange Canadian comedy I highly recommend if you ever channel surf and see it on.  It displayed a beat up van getting filled and the gas was worth more than the van.  Nowadays, that is increasingly true for all of us.  How do high gas prices affect us?  My own son has to consider his budget before he drives over from Scottsdale to North Phoenix to visit.  Prices are expected to get higher and higher as our President continues to give hundreds of billions to failing solar panel makers but will not let us drill for new oil or build new nuclear plants.  Eventually, we will all be stuck within one square mile, walking, eating, living, unable to afford to move about.

Some of you will remember recent Republican Candidate Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 tax proposal.  This appears to be Obama’s 9-9-9 proposal for his second term if he makes it:

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Comic Conventions in Afghanistan Are no Fun!

I have been going to comic conventions to promote my work and do workshops and panels.  I saw this picture on the web.  I am not sure comic book conventions work with burkhas.

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Are you Too Big to Fail?

First President Bush, then President Obama, have pursued a policy of “too big to fail.”  The first TARP, or Troubled Asset Relief Program set aside $700 Billion of your tax dollars to bail out AIG and others who had lost money investing on poor mortgages.  They were simply “too big to fail.”  Since then, the government has bailed out wall street investment firms, banks, and car manufacturers.  After bailing out General Motors, the government gave away ownership shares to union workers.  If GM had gone through normal bankruptcy first, those union contracts and debt would have been washed away the stockholders, such as your retirement fund, would still own the company.  But we spent $50 billion to bail them out, give the company to the union, then still had to have the go through bankruptcy.  All of the executives at these “too big to fail” organizations made more in bonuses than most of us will make in our lifetimes.

Unfortunately, most of us footing the bill for those “too big to fail” are small enough that our failure means nothing.  Most Americans who have pensions or investment funds have lost 40% or so of their net worth.  Last year 1.6 million bankruptcies were filed.  100,000 were businesses that were small enough to fail.  1.5 million were people small enough to fail.  Last year, 250,000 people lost their homes to foreclosure.  Did the banks lose money on those foreclosed homes?  Well, ninety percent was covered by mortgage insurance – which taxpayers bailed out the insurers because they were too big to fail.  The other ten percent would have hurt the banks – but you guessed it – they were too big to fail.

Meanwhile, the federal government annual debt now exceeds $1 trillion per year.  The government needs more money and more taxes for even more programs.  Why?  Because the federal government is too important and too big to fail.  Over 36% of federal workers now make over $100,000 per year while the average salary is over $76,000.  The average for taxpayers who pay for them is just over $40,000.  We selfish people who are small enough to fail need to pay for them so they can run our lives better than we would left to our own devices.  Those who have worked so hard to have nice things need to get rid of them and live on a smaller budget so that those like banks, investment houses and the federal government can spend all they desire.  Unfortunately, I am on the list of small enough to fail and I believe those who read this blog site are all with me in that same boat.

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