(no subject)
Jun. 29th, 2012 10:28 amI think the Great Eye Doctor Quest might be over, since Boston Eye Physicians takes Harvard Pilgrim insurance, is a 15-minute walk from work and seems to be a good place to go. (They're of the opinion that my retinas haven't decided to shred themselves any more than they already did, and if they do, there's a retina specialist there so I don't have to go back to MEEI.)
Overall I'm glad the health care law stands, but I guess now I'll have to file proof of insurance with both sets of taxes. For some reason, the fact that Massachusetts has a whole separate form for proof of insurance annoys me. I wish there was a box you could check for "same insurance information as last year", but I know that won't work.
I swear smoke detectors must have a timer somewhere that won't let the dead-battery beep start until well after dark. The second floor front one went off at 4:30 this morning. Last time I replaced that battery was sometime around February, and it went off at about 11:00 at night (soon enough after I went to bed that I considered getting up and dealing with it, but I had to put my glasses on to do it and the resultant vertigo convinced me that ladders were Right Out). Maybe I really should adopt the "replace all the batteries in all the smoke detectors whenever the clocks change" method, at least for the second floor.
The time has come, the walrus said, to find a financial advisor. I have almost enough money to consider investing in something, but I don't know if there's anything worth investing in these days.
Overall I'm glad the health care law stands, but I guess now I'll have to file proof of insurance with both sets of taxes. For some reason, the fact that Massachusetts has a whole separate form for proof of insurance annoys me. I wish there was a box you could check for "same insurance information as last year", but I know that won't work.
I swear smoke detectors must have a timer somewhere that won't let the dead-battery beep start until well after dark. The second floor front one went off at 4:30 this morning. Last time I replaced that battery was sometime around February, and it went off at about 11:00 at night (soon enough after I went to bed that I considered getting up and dealing with it, but I had to put my glasses on to do it and the resultant vertigo convinced me that ladders were Right Out). Maybe I really should adopt the "replace all the batteries in all the smoke detectors whenever the clocks change" method, at least for the second floor.
The time has come, the walrus said, to find a financial advisor. I have almost enough money to consider investing in something, but I don't know if there's anything worth investing in these days.