We're operating on the tentative hypothesis that somehow I have carried and borne Jilli's spirit child.
nods, awed. and slightly appalled.
Poor you! In a totally-has-no-right-as-non-parent-but-works-with-little-'uns kind of way, I do wholeheartedly agree with Cash. I see the result of parents who let the kid take control, and, gah, it is of the bad. But you know that, and I don't mean to patronise you, 'cause obviously you won't do that. (And, bless, church sounds adorable!) I'm just sorry you've got the stress of the meltdowns! NO fun.
Trudy, that is made of awesome.
We should do that when Cheney dies.
really? why?
For one, it made me feel like crap. I've been on a number of pills and never had a problem (aside from a few that made my libido take a nosedive).
Also,
the "spotting" they mention was more like your full-on period. And it was completely random. Apparently that gets better as time goes on, but, as someone who had never even had spotting and had always been regular on or off the pill (even if I forget to take it for a day or two), it just didn't seem worth it.
It had just come out when I went on it and my doctor was pretty keen on me trying it post-surgery, but even she thought my experience with it was ridiculous.
ETA: I believe she had other patients with similar experiences.
We should do that when Cheney dies.
That's assuming he
can
die.
Argh. I ordered contact lenses on December 18. I called to see why I hadn't gotten them yet, and they said that the order had gotten messed up, and I should get them in a few days.
Also waiting forever for some bathing suits I ordered. According to the tracking page, it just took them five days to go from Michigan to Ohio.
I had a similar experience with Seasonique, megan. i was on it for six months and never knew when to expect my period. it seemed like i was on it more often than not. i've since gone back to lo ovral.
Any one out there know how to navigate the insurance system. My doc prescribed Seasonale, the three month birth control pill, but my insurance is refusing to cover it. they want them to dispense it in one month increments, but it doesn't work that way, which seems to suggest that this is about money, which is FUCKING BULLSHIT. I'm more than a little pissed. Any thoughts?
Occasionally we have to convince the insurance company that a diabetic who uses three different injectable medications with two different delivery systems really does need to get the needles for one right after filling the prescription for the other kind of needles. So we have a no-go at the pharmacy trying to pick up the needles. Then when we call the insurance company, they instruct us to instruct the pharmacy to ask them (the ins. co.) for a manual override. We cannot seem to take the short cut of asking the pharmacy to request the override before talking to the insurance company.
So it is possible that if you can get hold of a customer service rep. at your insurance company, you can explain to them that the delivery system of that medication is incompatible with a one-month supply, and is there any kind of override or prior authorization they can do? That is presupposing that Seasonale is not excluded from their formulary.
ETA: Now! With actual coherent sentence structure!