Washington Evening Journal
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A lost ball cap and signing up for Medicare
By J.O. Parker, Chronicle Republican
Jul. 30, 2024 8:55 am
I lost my ball cap Saturday.
It’s not just any ball cap. It’s my OU Sooners ball cap.
I love that ball cap and wear it faithfully.
I attended the play “The Big Five-OH” at the Brooklyn Opera House. I was there to take photos and write a story for this publication.
I found my way to the balcony for a better vantage point to take photos. I laid my ball cap on my camera backpack, I think, and that is the last time I knew its whereabouts.
After the play, which by the way was a hoot, I made my way to the lobby to interview some of the guests and cast members.
The play was written and produced by Brian Mitchell of Grinnell. I talked to Brian and plan to interview him soon.
He asked me what I thought of the play. I said it was hilarious and I never knew from one scene to the next what was going to happen.
Brian smiled, saying that is the way it’s supposed to be.
Anyway, at one point, I wondered where my hat was, but I didn’t go back upstairs to check. I thought maybe I had left it in my Suburban and didn’t realize where it was.
I got home and there was no ball cap.
Debbie looked in the Suburban Sunday, and I looked again too. No ball cap!
I wrote a cast member who had contacted me about coming and taking photos and told her that I had lost my ball cap. She said that she would check for it Sunday.
She wrote me later to tell me that she didn’t find my ball cap. She even asked the custodian and was told that no one left a ball cap or turned one in.
I paid $30 for that hat, and now I don’t have it anymore.
Maybe I’m becoming absent-minded? Or disorganized?
I don’t know!
I will be 65 in late September and will go on Medicare.
Losing my ball cap is awful, almost depressing, but going on Medicare is even worse.
I was just a kid the other day.
I’ve been out of high school for 46 years. I remember going to my mom’s 50th class reunion in 2005 in southern Missouri. My 50th class reunion is just around the corner in 2028.
To put it all in perspective, the original Star Wars movies were released in 1977 in the summer between my junior and senior years of high school.
Well, back to Medicare.
In early June, I attended a public session at the Grinnell Library regarding signing up for Medicare. I then went and met with a SHIIP councilor in Grinnell a couple weeks later.
SHIIP offers one-on-one assistance, counseling and education to Medicare beneficiaries, their families and caregivers to help them make informed decisions about their care and benefits. SHIIP is part of the Iowa Insurance Division, and the service is free.
Anyway, I’m more confused now than I was before.
I think my next move is to get a Medicare card. Even signing up for that is confusing.
Do I get a Part A and Part B? What about a drug plan? The SHIIP councilor said I get a drug plan for 50 cents per month.
That’s either a testament to living a good life or is a blessing from God. I think it is the blessing part. That’s where the credit goes.
Maybe I’m a little stubborn. I hate taking medicine.
I will eat a couple Tums when my tummy hurts or take an aspirin if I need one, but that is about it.
And there are all these other parts that I can chose from. There is Part C, Part D, Part G and so on.
And I can’t forget about the Advantage plan which, unlike the traditional plan of Part A and Part B, is offered directly through insurance companies.
It’s all crazy, confusing and expensive!
Why do I need all these parts?
How does that help me?
I think to start, I’m going to go with the least amount of coverage I can to get by. I think if I understand it right, I can make changes to my plan every year.
First things first, I have to find my lost ball cap.
Have a great week and always remember that “Good Things are Happening” every day.