ANA Discussion Forum
Archive => Archives => Topic started by: Taylor on September 19, 2006, 07:21:02 pm
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Right now i'm filing for disability... has anyone else gone through this?
Were you approved?... i want money so i can put payments on the new car want.... mmmmm honda civic lol
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Good luck with that, sweetie. Get a lawyer! Mine was rejected and I guess most are on the first go around. It's very difficult to get it, I understand. Since I'm 60 and 1/2 and heading into Social Security at warp speed, I decided to forget an appeal. It's obvious I'm not disabled, although I don't feel I can return to what I did before...working in a retail environment. If I had severe balance issues, then I would have continued with it, but I don't. I'll just putz along until I'm 62. But if you feel you cannot work, then fight for it. Really...get a lawyer.
Sue in Vancouver
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I filed for disability in 03..it took till 05 to get it.. I have a lot of other problems besides the AN on my left side..If you do file . get a lawyer right away.. If you are not married you can apply for ssi . they will send you a check till you either win or loose ..but you need a lawyer. and hav eto prove that you have a disability that keeps you from working at anything...any more ? email me good luck OH I am 54yrs old 1.2 x0.08 cm left side
I have mini strokes, and I am deaf..have problem with memory some times I loose a hole day.. for get to eat..but have a good husband...
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Taylor,
There have been a few threads about this, do a search for Social Security on this forum. Good luck.
Regards,
Rob
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Taylor,
Chris applied for both SSI and SSD. We don't know anything yet. Batty told us to try OVR too (Occupational Vocational Rehab), they help pay tuition and hearing aids etc. and help you to get back into the work force. We did that too. Again, we don't know anything yet. At the SS office, they seemed hopeful that Chris might get it because he is so young and brain tumor was such a serious disability. We'll see. Good luck.
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Is filing for disability difficult?
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It's not the filing that's difficult, its the getting it that's difficult! Yes, There is alot of paperwork involved. Anyone seriously interested should get a lawyer after the first turndown (about 97% are turned down at first)
A few good threads here about it. You can use the search feature.
Capt Deb
(turned down twice and still waiting after 3 years)
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Turned down twice and waiting for my first hearing. I had been off from work a year before I applied and applied shortly after urgery so I was turned down quickly the first time and fairly quickly the second time. Now I have an attorney who tells me that it is an eighteen month wait until the date for the hearing. Good Luck.
BrendaO
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I've been told the same brendalu...I've had one denial..in the middle of appeal but said if I'm turned down from that it will take about 18 mos to get a hearing :o(
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Well, my 18 months were up 3 months ago. My lawyer says they haven't heard a disability case in this county for 6 months. Very discouraging. I'm trying to work some and it is very difficult--about 1/10th speed from the "old me". I've been dropped from all my galleries but one and they won't give me a show because they can't depend on me to get the new work done. With out solo shows, your career as an artist sinks fast--people want to see those on your credentials when they invest in your work. At my level it is an investment--no art fairs and such for me anymore in my league. I've missed a thousand days of work and I'm not disabled? Uh-oh, just about fell off the soapbox there!!!! Funny how the "new me" feels 40 years older than the "new me."
Capt Deb 8)
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Amen to that. I'm not too impressed with the "new" me either. I used to feel and act much younger than my years. I took the Realage test and it says I'm OLD, very OLD. So much for that.
BrendaO
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I seem to be rare-but I did get SSD without a lawyer and on the first time. I am a good writer and communicator-that helped. My neurosurgeon in the city said "oh no-you don't want to do that" and I was so confused as to how on earth i could go back to teaching. I had a compassionate neurologist up here who let me write down my problems and she incorporated them into a well written letter. That may have helped. I also was checked out by their doctor and the NYS teacher system doctor for physical problems and cognitive testing. They approved disability. There are the usual physical problems but I think my cognitive problems were more apparent. Patti
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Could it be that tumor size has something to do with it? People like me with small ANs are "supposed" to be able to do most of what they did before surgery. Aside from debilitating headaches that have kept me in bed for the better part of almost 4 years, most of which are triggered by mild exeertion, I probably could. I'm calling my lawyer on Monday about sending him more information, especially what others on this forum have been through due to headaches and the "Brain tumor and fatigue" booklet that Phyliss sent me. I don't want to discourage Taylor from filing for SSD, it doesn't hurt to file, it just takes up alot of time and is very stressful, but she's got a great Mom who can help her. A call to a lawyer would tell you if you even qualify for it at all. My atty consultation was free (by law.)
Good Luck,
Capt Deb 8)
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was that spoken in "tongue in cheek re small ans?"?????
I ask that as size has not much to do with after- abilities from an An and treatment unless it's huge..... and even not then.
it's all about where it is and the symptoms and we all know they vary from one individual to another....gawd help anyone who is denied due to "small size"....
hope you were joking....
windsong
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I know it is so frustrating to file for disability but the process is tough because there is so much fraud out there. As a provider I have had many patients that were able to work try to file and many lawyers call me asking me to "tweak" my findings on physical exam in order to make a patient seem more disabled than they are...there are always people out there looking for a little "free money".
Its a real shame because then good people like those on the board can't get the help they need. I know most people here would like nothing better than to be able to work and have the life they lead before...
It's a long process but I hope those who really need it will persist and get the help they need. I try to remember how grateful I am to be able to work when I have to drag myself out of bed in the mornings.. ::)
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Yeah i really wanna work! lol
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I want to work as I can make more money but...I need to be retrained for somehting new and that takes time...without some financial help I'll lose my house and my son and I will be box people under the bridge LOL SSD only cares if you can make 840 a month or more than you're not eligible...wish I could afford to live for 840 a month LOL
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I wish there were better retraining programs. Sometimes people can work (technically) but can't make anything near what they need to live on. My mom always said that disability is worse than death financially. I was lucky because my short term disability insurance paid 70% of my salary for the first 4 months and I could have had long term for the same amount forever if I had needed it. I NEVER thought I would need disability and thought many times about dropping it...and now we are upping my husbands just in case.
I so wish the programs were better for people. It seems like a waste of a lot of talent out there.
I think the refuse people in order to weed out people but if you keep on trying and have a good case you should get it.
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I was married to a Md. who works for disability and have seen and heard a lot from his perspective.
First off, the whole thing is like a big "cook book" that spells out just what you have to have ( or lack ) to qualify.
In the case of limbs or spine,etc.. it spells out the exact amount of loss of flexibilty or movement to the degree!
Also, while you may not be able to do your former job but are judged still capable of doing a desk job or something, you won't qualify!
Another unfortunate thing is that basically, the more education you have, the less chance you have of getting help!
Changing the subject a little, I had FSR at JHU in Jan. of '06. I guess I just had bad luck because I have had a big hearing loss on the AN side and now have major balance problems that I didn't have before. I was a foreign language teacher and I know that there is no way that I could go back into the classroom. Fortunately, I retired about the time I was dx'd. Imagine, if I were to have applied for ssd, there is a very big chance that my ex would get my case! :-{
just my 2cents
Susi
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Thanks for your two cents susi!
Ex getting your case would be a bad thing we'd probably have to make him walk the plank!
I was a teacher but with my balance and cognitive problems I can't go back in the classroom so I'm trying to get retrained for something I can do from home but will need some sort of financial something to get me to that point. Either that or I need to find a husband willing to support me LOL