I’m crossing my fingers for you, Quasi. It sounds like you had better docs than the one I got sent to some years ago by Social Security, who in five minutes decided that the rare diagnosis that had taken several expert doctors from the time I was nine months until I was five years old to pin down was wrong and I just have chronic scoliosis…riiiiiiiiiiiight. I had the fun of telling that to somebody today who has a similar diagnosis to mine and the look on her face was priceless.
They didn’t turn me down when I first applied, though. And I’m now off it, though obviously our situations are totally different. It was there when I needed it. Hang in there!
I wonder… one of the disadvantages of hiring people with experience is that you get them “mistrained.” Your company does things a certain way, but the people you hire (specially if they’ve had a single job) arrive with the idea that “everybody does things!” the way they were done in their other job(s). You know, like that guy who thought that “everybody” measured density in kg/gallon… (yeah, he’d only had the one job).
So I wonder and it’s just idle musings, how many of the SS workers whose instinct is “just say no” had their previous job as the first-line “just say no” folks that some insurance companies use.
I have to disagree with you. Social workers, shrinks and lawyers here in Pennsylvania have always said that everybody gets turned down the first time.
I also found that the intake person for the county office was EXTREMELY unpleasant. Everybody who has handled my case since then has been a saint. I got the distinct impression he was chosen for intake to scare people off.
Quasimodem
IIRC, when I was finally approved I was retropaid til the date of my application. After being denied a few times and getting even more red tape and paperwork thrown at us then even my father (37 years for the Department of Defense and a master of bureaucracy) could handle, we went to a lawyer. He found that I had finally been approved that day and charged us nothing.