My dad had a shit heart, so I tell me wife if I have heart attack to drive me the extra 15 minutes to the big Sharp hospital in SD and not the little one here in town. Those fuckers kill people.
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My dad had a shit heart, so I tell me wife if I have heart attack to drive me the extra 15 minutes to the big Sharp hospital in SD and not the little one here in town. Those fuckers kill people.
I've been to both and they both suck. But I sure am glad 25 million people *don't* think those places suck.
Hard to argue with that.Quote:
You know what people really hate? Being broke AF and having no hope.
Yep - it always impresses me how miserable people can claim to be even in the face of being in, arguably, the best time in the history of humanity.Quote:
Get out a bit. Talk to people. Go in that shitty looking diner in the middle of nowhere.
See who is happy. Chances are it will have fuck all to do with where their home is or how nice it is. For us, it may have something to do with skiing but even that isn't a secret recipe
Yep. My dad recently moved over to seacoast NH (still north of the bridge, but those environs) and it saved his life when he had a heart issue. They were able to get him in and do a stent in a day or two whereas he probably wouldn't have even gotten to diagnosis in the rural area he was previously.
6 figures? What's the first number?
Is you think it's all gonna be the same in 20 years, rewind to 2003 and let me know if you saw this all coming.
The WFHrs that can't really explain to me what they do besides laptop, PJs, "hoping on" every now and then better keep their heads on a swivel.
I'm not saying that those that can afford it won't continue living wherever the fuck Lumberg will let them, I'm saying that, in the future, the percentage of the population to which that applies may decrease for a few reasons.
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Ha ha. Bend is a big city compared to most ski towns. Try using in-network physicians in a red state rural area that's openly hostile to Obamacare.
Like I said a while back: the Teton Valley is a great place to retire to, if you use a private jet to access your healthcare.
"My house had a great view before all these other houses were built around it"
Says the person who built that house in front of another house that used to have a great view.
"When I moved here, there were hardly any people here"
Says the one of millions of people that moved to a place to get away from all the people.
I just can't deal with it anymore. I'm going to buy an Outside magazine and see where the next best place to live is and move there before everyone else.
I visited the area last year and spent some time with all old college friend who grew up there. He would disagree; MANY people have moved there in recent years. The traffic snarls were pretty noticeable even to a first time visitor like me, and he reported that they were pretty new. That area is exploding like Bozeman.
I think AI is going to take those WFH jobs before too long anyway. Then those of us who work with our hands will be laughing all the way to the bank, at least until the formerly employed tech folks run out of money to hire us to remodel their houses. We're all connected.
Should be in the "things that amuse you" thread, don'tchya think? :D
Let's face it - shit's changing just like it always did, but as rapidly aging, curmudgeonly old fucks, we're less and less able to deal with it.
Our kids will do the same when they're middle aged.
And so it goes...
6 figures? What's the first number?
Is you think it's all gonna be the same in 20 years, rewind to 2003 and let me know if you saw this all coming.
The WFHrs that can't really explain to me what they do besides laptop, PJs, "hoping on" every now and then better keep their heads on a swivel.
I'm not saying that those that can afford it won't continue living wherever the fuck Lumberg will let them, I'm saying that, in the future, the percentage of the population to which that applies may decrease for a few reasons.
Sent from my Turbo 850 Flatbrimed Highhorse
That was the theme of the recent South Park special. The last handyman in town becomes obscenely wealthy as there's no one left who "knows how to do shit" and he's taking bids for his time.
Already happened in Jackson. I know a guy who repairs hot tubs there and he makes more than double per hour what an airplane mechanic makes in a normal economy. Wrap your head around that! To get a hot tub pump swapped out in Jhole, you'll be paying around $200/hr for labor, a huge markup on parts and maybe waiting a couple weeks. Basic tub maintenance is around $1800/year for weekly cleaning and chems so he can subcontract the grunt work at $30/hr and still be rolling in the cash.
Hahaha. That was a REALLY great episode.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcoGzT9QrTI
Gotta love the "I work with my hands" superiority complex that assumes none of us have other skillsets. WFH is here to stay, but as others have mentioned, making Silicon Valley pay not in SV is likely to be a thing of the past. That said, it's a better model for plenty of jobs, so count on it continuing.
Superiority complexes from desk jockeys who happen to work trades, no less.
Parents have had great care at St Charles and the overall billing fuckery has been ok (by US standards. Obviously we’re not a 1st world nation in this dept).
You want really shitty, try Barton in Tahoe. 3X the cost, 1/3 the quality. . Fortunately we have options within a 45 min drive.
My mom was a reallly good dressmaker and her prices were actualy pretty cheap, but the only person who ever complained was the wife of a guy who owned a doz building supply stores so she obviously had the $$$$
but my mom fired her
Don't think the Healthcare thing is just for the Olds. I'm 48 (only kind of old) and had a heart attack while running. Luckily I live less than 10 minutes from a great hospital who just happened to have a world class intervention cardiologist on call that day. I was back home 2 days later. If the ambulance ride was 30 minutes, instead of 10, no guarantee that I'm still here with no complications.
I’m sitting here chuckling at the Midwest bashing in this thread. I’m loving my life here in Northern Wisconsin. I broke 100+ days of skiing last year and the fly fishing here is incredible. Very casual and laidback lifestyle that I am loving.
Don’t get me wrong, I loved every minute of my almost 40 years in Montana. But I love my life in this area just as much. I guess it’s just a matter of perspective.
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