Yes, for example, when I signed an agreement to lease a trombone for Casper's school band last October, they apparently ran a credit report, so now the mortgage lender needs documentation (which I have, but still) of her $28-a-month trombone habit. Any credit reports pulled in the last 6 months they'll want documentation, on, they told me. And in my first mortgage, my stepfather gave us a gift of money, and we had to produce a letter from him documenting the gift.
Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
It is a sad morning when you are able to sleep in an extra hour but forgot to turn the ringer off on your phone and get periodically woken by people trying to reach you first thing.
I am off to San Diego Sunday. Do we have people in San Diego? I'm down there for business so I don't know how much time I'll have. The best thing I did in 2014 was get a TSA precheck number.
Me! I am a person in San Diego! (A dark grey, lurky person this week, but still). To the best of my knowledge, the only 'ffista in San Diego.
I am currently fostering some orphaned baby field mice (looong story), so my schedule is a little tricky with feeding them every 4 hours or so, but I'd be happy to try to make something work, if possible!
The best thing I did in 2014 was get a TSA precheck number.
Oh hell yes. That's even more important than my elite frequent flyer status. I'm going to be sad when it's no longer predominantly limited to people who travel a lot.
And in my first mortgage, my stepfather gave us a gift of money, and we had to produce a letter from him documenting the gift.
When Rob and I bought the house in MD, we used the money we received as wedding gifts for the escrow funds. A lot of it was cash. I don't remember how we got out of proving that it was all gifts. The rest were checks, and I had to pull up the photocopies (glad I did that).
There's a Dental Convention in Boston this weekend, and I gave a dental student a complicated ride there, so we talked a lot about it and our mutual dental experiences.
I'm going to have dental insurance again (thank you Obamacare) so I may even seen a dentist again. Whee?
I just changed the inappropriate use of "literally" in an article, and I feel drunk with power.
👍👌✌️👏👊
Thanks Maria and flea. Dad is just co-signing to help offset my horrible credit. I haven't used any credit since moving to Colorado - our house was almost foreclosed on and I ended up with all the debt accumulated during our marriage, so I've been working on paying that off. I've made a few slips on paying medical bills and I'm not sure what else.
I have put in requests for my credit reports and will spend the next couple of months reviewing/cleaning those as best as possible if there is anything I can "fix".
Current plan for the downpayment is borrowing against my 401k. I know it isn't the wisest thing, but I'd rather do that than try to fight for a zero down loan.
Steph, I am mentally giving you a gif with someone clapping with glee in appreciation of that. I am almost as thrilled as if I had done it myself.
Although also, WTH? Who's writing a medical article for a professional journal and using literally wrong? Heavens above, they're winning this war, aren't they?
Who's writing a medical article for a professional journal and using literally wrong? Heavens above, they're winning this war, aren't they?
It's not a hard data article, like "We studied a cohort of 12,000 patients and literally every one died!" It's a soft article on the history of how a branch of medicine developed. It mentions how an important article was published in 1985, which implied that how patients were being pre-screened for heart surgery was inadequate, and "laboratories were inundated, literally overnight, with patients being referred for preoperative screening prior to noncardiac surgery."
And yet I just don't think it was *literally overnight.* Which night? Citation needed.
I changed it to "laboratories were quickly inundated," and I will push back if the author doesn't like it.