Water water everywhere

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Medicare enrollment

Thanks, from Barb W. 

We get it, you’ve got plenty of things on your “to-do” list already. But if you haven’t already added these 5 items to your list, you’ll want to do so now. Why? So you can get the best health care plan that fits your needs and budget.

5 things to do during this year’s Medicare Open Enrollment Period:

  1. Review your plan notice you received in the mail.
  2. Consider what services and benefits you’re likely to use in the coming year —  have your health care needs changed?
  3. Learn which coverage options are important to you.
  4. Compare estimated out-of-pocket costs — see an average of how much you may pay depending on your coverage choices.
  5. Shop for plans that best fit your needs and budget — the lowest-cost health plan might not be the best choice for you.

Now’s your chance to review your coverage and see if you need to make any changes for next year. Cross these 5 items off of your “to-do” list before Medicare Open Enrollment ends on December 7!

Sincerely,

The Medicare Team

Call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048 You can also get information on your most recent claims without having to speak to a customer service representative. Please be sure you have your Medicare number available before calling. Listen to your current prescription drug plan enrollment.

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Lucy’s advice

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George Romney – The free press is not our enemy. It is very much our friend.

Opinion in the NYT: “When I was growing up, Americans got their news very differently than we do today. The newspaper was a central part of every day; in our house, the Detroit Free Press was delivered in the morning and the Detroit News in the afternoon. Both ran stories by local beat reporters and from wire services around the globe. Weekly magazines, like Time and Life, featured in-depth stories and photojournalism on major events. The New York Times was the newspaper of record with its motto: “All the News That’s Fit to Print.” There were only three television networks — CBS, NBC, and ABC — and most Americans stopped their day to watch the evening news. And while Republicans and Democrats had deep disagreements on issues and policy, they based their thinking on an understanding of the same basic facts.

Today, most of us get our news from our mobile device, often curated for us by an algorithm created to show only what we like to read or agree with. Often, the content comes without the benefit of an editor, a fact-checker, or a responsible news organization. In some cases, our “news” may actually be propaganda from a campaign, from a political party, or even from a foreign adversary. Accordingly, our political disagreements may not even be based upon the same “facts.” This represents a growing challenge for democracy, dependent as it is upon a citizenry informed by fact and truth. It also underscores the vital role played by professional news organizations. They may be more critical today than ever before.

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E Pluribus Unum – a warning about the rise of fascism

Fascism: A Warning by [Albright, Madeleine]            Parallels in Autocratic Leadership: Where is America heading?

A warning. Where is America heading? I met Dr. Wolfgang Mack briefly in the Skyline dining room last evening and was given a copy of his most recent book. He had the traumatic experience of being a youth in Hitler’s Germany as friends “disappeared” and fear became the norm. Both he and Madeleine Albright, who lost three relatives in the holocaust, write of their concerns about the rise of nationalism (aka white supremacy) in our country. As our President said recently at a rally in Houston, “You know what I am? I’m a nationalist, okay? I’m a nationalist. Nationalist. Nothing wrong. Use that word. Use that word.”

I happen to be a fan of the TV series, Madam Secretary. I was amazed in the first episode of Season 5 (click here to view), that three former Secretaries of State came together (women-men-white-black-jew) on this show to discuss the uniting values of our country, E Pluribus Unum (One From Many). In their conversation they differentiate nationalism from patriotism – dividing and uniting. We must listen. It’s a warning to all.

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Musical month from Sky Opera with an opera and two live performances

November’s events from Cornelius:

Wednesday, November 7, ‘Night at the Opera’: Così fan tutte, 4:30 Part 1, 6:15 dinner, 7:30 Part 2

Tuesday, November 13, ‘SkyOpera Live!’: Flora & Dora and Freddy & Willy, 7:30 PM

Tuesday, November 27, ‘SkyOpera Live!’: Early Mozart Opera Excerpts, 7:30 PM

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Lawsuit for “Wrongful Life” after unwanted but successful CPR

Ed note: Do you have that POLST form stored where 911 and your loved ones can find it? We can have all the documents completed but what happens if they don’t pay attention to them. Now lawsuits are springing up when folks are resuscitated against their wishes. 

POST sink

From the NYT: “What happened to Beatrice Weisman before dawn on Aug. 29, 2013, was not supposed to happen: The medical staff at Maryland General Hospital found her in cardiac arrest, resuscitated her and kept her alive.

The matriarch of a close-knit family on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, Ms. Weisman, then 83, had suffered a serious stroke in June and had spent weeks in two hospitals.

Fortunately, she and her husband had drafted advance directives; she named her husband, William, to make medical decisions if she became unable to.

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What does yoga do for you?

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How to identify BS – innovative course at the University of Washington

How can we sort out the fake news and all the BS that is thrown our way. Well, the UW has now put together a one credit course. The s… word might annoy you but the academic approach to sorting out big data is innovative.

Thanks to Gordon G for bringing our attention to this Seattle Times story.

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Restoring your apartment

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To be happier, focus on what’s within your control

Ed Note: One time I flew into to JFK from my overseas post and went to the airline counter to check on my transfer flight to Austin. She kind of cringed and said, “I’m sorry sir there’s been a mistake, there is no such flight.” I had been living in the middle east for the past year and had learned the many ways of dealing with fate and the delays in all kinds of plans. So I said, “OK, just book me on the next available flight.” – which turned our to be 4 hours later. Then I said, “Thanks for your help.” She looked astounded and smiled, “Why you’re not even angry!”

This article in Aeon is a gentle reminder about how much control over life we really have (don’t have) and how to deal with its vicissitudes: 

“God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
And wisdom to know the difference.

“This is the Serenity Prayer, originally written by the American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr around 1934, and commonly used by Alcoholics Anonymous and similar organisations. It is not just a key step toward recovery from addiction, it is a recipe for a happy life, meaning a life of serenity arrived at by consciously taking what life throws at us with equanimity.

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Is the year really ending?

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Would you choose to live wild and free as a wolf, or have a job with benefits, like a sled dog?

From Aeon: “Swedish-born Sven Engholm owns and operates a dogsledding tour company in the extreme north of Norway, far above the Arctic Circle. In Vargsamtal, this prizewinning elite dogsledder tells the Swedish filmmaker Axel Byrfors how he took a group of stray dogs along with his dogsled team on an expedition to Kamchatka. With a spare, poetic style of storytelling, Engholm imagines that the howls exchanged between the harnessed dogs and the wild wolves nearby are a conversation about who has the better life. Set to striking images of the Finnmark Plateau, this evocative bit of musing pits the merits of a secure, purpose-driven existence against a life of boundless freedom.”

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Staff unchained at Halloween

Staff H 2

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Lance Rhoades – film historian

Last evening we were treated to an incredible talk about Mary Shelley’s book Frankenstein which she wrote at age 19 – and how Frankenstein has become part of our culture. Actually the monster has no name. Frankenstein was the doctor who created him – regrettably. Lance Rhoades noted that he has many talks he presents in many countries. Let’s have him back!

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The New York Times: Washington State voters will decide next week whether to impose a fee on carbon emissions. We hope they do.

From the NYT: “Will voters in Washington State breathe new life into the idea of taxing carbon emissions? Plenty of people worried about the earth’s future certainly hope so.

Climate scientists and economists have long argued that the single best way to slow global warming is to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels and raise that price over time, thus creating a sensible market incentive to reduce emissions and invest in cleaner energy sources. Carbon pricing was also high on the list of urgent recommendations of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which warned in a major report this month that without swift action to control emissions the world will begin suffering global warming’s worst consequences — including, but not limited to, the displacement of millions of people by drought and sea-level rise — as early as 2040, much sooner than previously forecast.

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Facebook is reportedly planning a big new facility right in Microsoft’s back yard

From CNBC: “Redmond, Washington, has been the home of Microsoft for decades, but the maker of Word may soon have company. Facebook is planning a 650,000 square-foot office project in Redmond, Washington, according to a report Tuesday.

The company has approached the city with plans for two buildings, which could be six stories tall and include office space, labs, kitchens and an event center, according to the Puget Sound Business Journal, which cites emails and public records.

The project is currently being referred to as “Building X,” according to the report.

Facebook has not yet applied for building permits, but a project schedule sent to the city shows that the company hopes to demolish existing buildings on the allotted land as soon as May, according to the report.

Despite its scandals with security breach, the handling of user data and the spread of misinformation, Facebook has continued to expand its footprint and grow its headcount.

The company is based in Menlo Park, Calif., in Silicon Valley, but this year moved some employees into a skyscraper in San Francisco. It now employs more than 30,000 people, up from about 20,700 last June, according to financial filings.”

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It’s all on the smartphone

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Halloween Party

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Earl E. Bakken, Pacemaker Inventor and Medtronic Founder, Dies at 94

Thanks to Dick D

From the NYT: “Earl E. Bakken, who, working in a Minneapolis garage, invented the first wearable, battery-powered pacemaker and went on to help create the world’s largest medical device company, died on Sunday at his home in Hawaii. He was 94.

His death, near Kiholo Bay in the North Kona District of the Big Island, was announced by Medtronic, the company he and a brother-in-law founded in 1949 when Mr. Bakken was a 25-year-old electrical engineering student.

The partnership got off to a slow start. Originally conceived as a repair shop for hospitals’ electronic equipment, Medtronic made $8 in its first month in business. But following a blackout in the Twin Cities in 1957, a young surgeon asked Mr. Bakken if he could make a pacemaker that would not be dependent on the hospital’s power supply. Mr. Bakken fashioned a small, battery-powered device, basing the circuit on a design for a metronome that he had found in a back issue of Popular Electronics magazine.”

Click here for the full article.

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Medicare Advantage and Original Medicare

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In a recent presentation at Skyline, there was some confusion generated in comparing the advantages of having Original Medicare (with a supplemental medigap plan and drug plan) vs. having a Medicare Advantage plan. Unfortunately a private insurance company’s “educational brochure” was used. Skyline residents need to be very aware of potential limitations to some services in the Terraces with the Medicare Advantage plans because of provider network limitations. Also there can be significant issues in switching back from the Advantage to Original coverage. Please do your homework, especially before you decide to switch from Original Medicare to an Advantage plan. Please click here for a discussion about this if interested. I hope that any future Medicare presentation at Skyline can be given by a knowledgeable advocate who is not involved in sales.

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The woes of show and tell

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Halloween in the sea

Octopus

Thanks to Mike C – great pic

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Rules of Civility (and Incivility)

Ed Note: It seems quaint to look over the 110 Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation that George Washington wrote out at age 16. They were so kind and gentle, I couldn’t help but think of our fractured modern discourse. So, hoping you’ll forgive me, in a cathartic moment I’ve noted 30 contra rules that appear to be in force: The Rules of Incivility. I’m certain others will be forthcoming.

George Washington

“By age sixteen, Washington had copied out by hand, 110 Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation. They are based on a set of rules composed by French Jesuits in 1595. Presumably they were copied out as part of an exercise in penmanship assigned by young Washington’s schoolmaster. The first English translation of the French rules appeared in 1640, and are ascribed to Francis Hawkins the twelve-year-old son of a doctor.

Today many, if not all of these rules, sound a little fussy if not downright silly. It would be easy to dismiss them as outdated and appropriate to a time of powdered wigs and quills, but they reflect a focus that is increasingly difficult to find. The rules have in common a focus on other people rather than the narrow focus of our own self-interests that we find so prevalent today. Fussy or not, they represent more than just manners. They are the small sacrifices that we should all be willing to make for the good of all and the sake of living together.

These rules proclaim our respect for others and in turn give us the gift of self-respect and heightened self-esteem.

Richard Brookhiser, in his book on Washington wrote that “all modern manners in the western world were originally aristocratic. Courtesy meant behavior appropriate to a court; chivalry comes from chevalier – a knight. Yet Washington was to dedicate himself to freeing America from a court’s control. Could manners survive the operation? Without realizing it, the Jesuits who wrote them, and the young man who copied them, were outlining and absorbing a system of courtesy appropriate to equals and near-equals. When the company for whom the decent behavior was to be performed expanded to the nation, Washington was ready. Parson Weems got this right, when he wrote that it was ‘no wonder every body honoured him who honoured every body.'”

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Up and Down on Terry

Towers on Terry

Posted in In the Neighborhood, Uncategorized | 2 Comments