The good news in
The bad news is that their insurance plan is trying to drop them, claiming it's because they paid a premium late in 2007. She's protesting this every which way she can (although if you have any expertise in this area and can help her navigate the process, that sort of help would probably be appreciated too), but things look grim. She hasn't been able to work regularly in months and without insurance the level of jeopardy her family is in (she's already been struggling to pay for her husband's medication) is going to increase exponentially.
For many of us it's always felt like barbarism enough when we've had to wonder if we could afford to keep a beloved pet alive. Imagine if someone was forcing you to have to think that about your husband.
If you can help her with $$, insurance navigation advice, other resources, please visit her journal. Her paypal is tribereddragon [AT] gmail [dot] com.
UPDATE: a pharmaceutical assistance program is going to pay for her husband's meds for a full year beginning March 1. But she still needs $2,000 to get him his medication for February.
At some point, I tend to feel I should set an official policy about what I will and won't link to when people need help, but life is murky and a lot of people need help, and I think it just has to be a matter of whim and random and gut. The less I know you or the person in need the higher the bar is going to be, because I don't have any real way of vetting this stuff. Which, by the way, means if you all see a story you want to help, do your own homework so you're comfortable!
Anyway, people in my life have also suffered from mysterious debilitating lung ailments, so Holly's story jumped out at me. If you feel you want to help, visit her website.
Look, perspective is good and so is helping people/being an activist/giving money.
But here's the horrible truth about existence: terrible things happening to someone else somewhere else doesn't suddenly give you the tools to not be upset by stuff going on in your own life.
More clearly: I have very little patience with people telling people what their priorities should be. I can be a queer activist AND donate money to Haiti. I can do clinic defense and still care about global warming. And I can write to my politicians regarding healthcare reform and still try to make an impact on global poverty.
I also, however, like everyone else, have limited resources, and I have about zero tolerance for people telling me I'm not allowed to be actively engaged in issues that affect my life directly because they view them as marginal or fringe (because they aren't queer, because they don't have a uterus, because they believe that good people never wind up screwed by the healthcare system) and think a good way to emphasize that marginalization (which they believe in as a righteous truth) is to engage in some apples & oranges suffering comparison.
Is there an issue you think I can make an impact on or might not be aware of? Tell me, but I will run out of time for you very quickly if the framework for that is that my issues as a [eighty billion boxes here] don't matter.
Finally, I don't think it's your business how much time and money I give to various causes and charities. I'm not running for public office. I'm not a role model. I'm not campaigning for some award. I do what I can. Sometimes with my wallet, sometimes with my little corner of the Internet. And it will always be a simple truth that I can always do better (I still, as an example, must post that EPIC charity list you all helped me assemble). But I don't owe you an accounting of these matters.
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