12/07/2019–YOU DON’T HAVE TO LIVE LIKE A REFUGEE

Great song. Great band. Great sentiment and it captures what I want to talk about today. 12/07/1941 was 78 years ago but the enormity of the event still resonates today. I utilize it every year, too. My wedding anniversary is tomorrow. All you have to do is read a newspaper or look at a newsfeed channel and there will invariably be a mention of the seminal date in history. Bingo. Drop by Albertson’s and get some killer flowers tomorrow for Cupcake…

This works very well for an established date but not so much for Easter, Thanksgiving or Fat Tuesday. But I digress. Today is all about the wonderful world of nexus letters-those elusive, sought after letters from your personal care physician about what’s wrong with you and how s/he, an M.D. mind you, is pretty positive your (pick all that apply: DM II, prostate cancer, IHD, NHL, porphyria, chloracne, PN etc. came from ingesting/inhaling too much Agent Orange for breakfast in (pick one- Thailand, Guam, Laos, Philippines, Korea) ________________.  Herein lies your error. You don’t ever want to dwell on how it was done wrong. You need the repair order. You don’t want to live your life as a VA refugee.

As I hope most know, you need three things to win-a disease/injury/risk factor/stressor in service, the same thing now and a well-reasoned Independent Medical Opinion. It’s also called the Nexus Letter. VA will offer their own c&p exam and it will find your malady is not related to service. They have a Cliff Notes© book full of excuses. It’s called the M 21.

I just received a Hep C referral from a good friend and major CAVC litigator to “fix”. The problem here is it never should have arrived at the Court in the first instance. It was appealed all the way up without any IMO. Or was it? The VA provided one for free. All IMOs are not equal. We usually come to find this out when we lean very heavily on our personal care physician (PCP) to write one. They don’t do nexus letters and IMOs. They do stethoscopes, oxycontin and malpractice. Hell, they can’t read their own writing. I’ve seen some daisies written by medical transcriptionists that are unintelligible or illogical. Depending on your own doctor to successfully do this is a crap shoot. Worse, you’ll never convince him to review all your service medical records and your claims folder. That would take weeks to accomplish. As we all know, VA’s favorite refrain is “We had our doc read all the records and your doc didn’t have them. Our shit is more probative”. And they’re right. They beat you fair and square- but only because they didn’t give you a copy of the rules in Dick and Jane Speak.

Option #1

Sadly, there are really only two ways to do this. Actually three if you count all the new VA “counselors for claims” specialists out there who will ramrod your claims for 40% of the total increase in  ratings percentage dollars times 6 months. Oh, and all those IMOs they wrote at $1,000 apiece you agreed to. Thus, if you went from 10% to 30% and your monthly check increased from $142.29/mo. to $486.69/mo. and you got retro back to filing in 10/05/2017, you have 40% of 6 months of the difference between the 30% and the 10%… or $2,066.40 plus IMO costs. But wait. You have to do all the filing. You have make sure you do it correctly.  All your “counselor” is going to do is set you up with a doctor or shrink to get an IMO to win with. The only good news I see in this is if you lose and your IMO falls flatter than a cheese souflé in a daycare center, there’s no charge. That’s option #1.

Option #2

Option #2 is to go with a VSO and accept the VA examiner’s IMO which pretty much guarantees a loss all the way to the CAVC and beyond. VSOs rarely win  unless you’re holding a CIB in one hand and a Purple Heart in the other. If you bring your own “real” IMO provided by your VA counselor/expert former DRO, you very well may prevail. As usual, VA will lowball you and phase two begins on appeal for a higher initial rating. If you win that, that VA counselor will promptly show up with his hand out again. Same gig- 6 months of 40% of the increase. And so on.

Your new BFF VA counselor will soon discover you have waaaaaaaay more wrong with you than you thought. He has you file for all those extras and gets you inspected and written up for all thoooooose contentions. You refile and if you win any of those, you have to pay the… yep-40% of the first 6 months plus the costs of any of those successful IMOs. The truth is one doctor sits down with you for 30 minutes and does 5 IMO examinations all together. You feel it’s basically one. When you win, you discover you had four more than you thought and they won… at $1,000 each on top of the 40% for 6 months.

Option #3

Option #3 is the best to my thinking-and not from my perspective as a VA ambulance chaser. You’ll be wanting to hunt down a good (read NOVA) lawdog for this project-not a run-of-the-mill, Yellow Pages, jack of all trades and master of none patent attorney. You don’t want a JD with a major in tax law or divorces doing this. You want someone who lives, eats and breathes 38 USC and 38 CFR. This is far easier said than done.

I know it’s becoming common knowledge as we spread the word on how easy it is obtain high-quality IMOs from top-dog specialists in the field. The problem is most reputable IMO companies will only deal with a professional like an attorney. Face it. Your red hot IMO written by your  RN roommate who’s still on her 6 mo. trial employment at Kaiser Permanente™ about your brain glioblastoma secondary to Camp Lejeune bathwater is pretty sketchy. Fortunately, a VA lawdog (or an accredited practitioner like myself) charges a flat 20% with VA looking over his shoulder.  Your representative charges you the cost of the IMO from their specialist(s) and I would pray they are as upright as me and don’t mark it up 30% for dealer prep and destination fees. There simply are no surprises in this nexus system. You pay for postage and copy fees. You pay half up front to research the IMO and figure out if a doctor can make it fly without lying. That is nonrefundable. If he agrees, you pay the second half upon completion and mutual agreement on the final draft language. Many times, I get my specialists to opine on the secondaries for the same price and then file after I win the service connection. I then resubmit the same IMO and point out the other diagnoses as my medical proof. I argue these were implied claims and the VA simply missed them. Hey, it works. VA caves in and grants. Since they didn’t deny it in the original decision, it’s basically pro bono. I don’t make anything off getting them up to SMC S. Win-win for me (less work) and for the Vet (more money in his pocket).

So here’s my Veteran’s SOC. Fast forward to page 23 for the  denial logic. For what it’s worth, I probably would have denied based on the new IMO#1.

VET SOC redact

The IMO- Dos and Don’ts

Now let’s talk IMOs. As I mentioned, not all IMOs are equal. VA makes a commitment when they deny your claim. They usually point to an IMO-like pronouncement by a proctologist or podiatrist that your  small cell carcinoma infestation of the brain is not related to AO  and importantly, why it isn’t. At this point, they’ve made a commitment as to the cause. They cannot change their reason/rationale.  Sadly, that is acceptable and usually passes muster even though it fails the smell test. The reason you lose is you have no IMO. But the good news is you now know what you have to have to win. Rebut the denial logic. You thought VA was going to provide you with a quasi-legitimate IMO. They did. It just wasn’t fair. You’re not a doctor so you now have to come up with your own IMO about 85% of the time according to VA win/loss statistics. Or, you go down the road as most Vets do and continue to bang your head against the wall with no IMO until you die or get a good law dog who recognizes what you need to win. Don’t feel bad. It took me 19 years to absorb this concept.

Chantelle

With that said, if you just go out and try to find someone who purports to do IMOs for a living, I think you need to do some research on them. I wish I had. Some of these “professional” folks will write one and it will fail. This is what just happened to me. I called the Shrink up and said “You augered in, Doc.” He says “Well, it’s your fault then. I worked with what you gave me.” This is not how it’s done. Let’s say you’re a baker. If you see you lack a naked lady to pop out of your client’s Bachelor Party Cake (and someone is paying you $2,500 to bake it), you don’t deliver it sans Mademoiselle Chantelle and then blame the buyer for the no sale.

A run-of -the-mill attorney who does divorces just handles your paperwork. He doesn’t go out and get an IMO. He has no clue how this works most of the time. He might if he does Social Security appeals but that’s about it. Same scenario. You law dog will probably author lovely legal arguments in your favor but doesn’t provide the Magic Paper. You lose and he revokes his POA and swears he’ll never do another VA claim again. Vets don’t understand that we do not have wheelbarrows full of cash to pay for IMOs. This is why it’s a two-stage process. If it cannot be done, you don’t have to  buy the whole enchilada and find out a year later you have a useless IMO.

I always tell all my prospective IMO writers to keep the law aspect out of it. The last thing I want is a shrink in a white Lab Coat waving a bottle of Valium spouting 38 CFR and that the client deserves at least 70% for his ______.  The law side is my job and I take umbrage with someone else muddying up the legal waters.  I find I can vocalize precedence better and avoid instructing the Examiner on how to correctly read M 21.  Bad form. Never dump on a mental midget. Besides, the CAVC has already spoken to certain lawyers who are also doctors trying to ride two horses simultaneously.

So here’s an IMO, written by a doctor of Psychology that flunked the VA audition. I’ll let all of you sleuths examine it and opine on what it has or doesn’t have in the way of compelling logic for the VA examiner to grant. I was less than impressed when I first read it and it doesn’t improve with age. VA said as much, too.

The blog today is my attempt at atonement. I was new to the IMO process in late 2017 and used it quite well.  I was contacted about the same time  by a psychologist who offered his services for PTSD/MDD claims. Shoot. He even invited us out to dinner to pitch his spiel. I promptly handed him off to my client to deal with directly. Boy howdy was that about wrong and two thirds as you can read below. It looks like I hired a lawyer to write it and he had to copy and paste it twice to make it look longer. Worse, I had to pester him to make grammar corrections-really simple stuff like missing/incorrect punctuation and spelling errors. He never did change the abbreviations like AVN. It took two weeks and they still missed half of them.  Expertise on a scale of five ?

*1/2

IMO No. 1 redact

I got the Legacy SOC back on October 9th last which gave me 60 days to shit or get off the pot and lose the client’s effective date of filing. I called my good friends at Mednick Associates and they came through yesterday (Thursday) morning. I assembled it with scant days left to do so.

IMO No. 2 redact

I am rather proud of my record as a litigator. I do not take defeat easily. I consider it avoidable. I promptly decided (with Cupcake’s concurrence) to buy another IMO on my own dime to right the wrong. As you can see, the author (#2)did some intense research on reams and reams of evidence and managed to cull far more that author #1. She was less expensive and did it in less than sixty days versus four months for the first grammar-challenged IMO. The quality of the finished product is Mednick Associates’  Hallmark. I have no doubt my client will prevail.

God I hate that when that happens

Posted in Independent Medical Opinions, Tips and Tricks, VBMS Tricks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

CAVC– USING McWHORTER FOR FUN AND PROFIT.

Every day I go on Google news in the morning to see what wild and crazy articles they have. It’s a potpourri of liberal and conservative thinking. Some are better than others.

Former WH janitor overhears President saying ______to_______!

Turns out it was President Eisenhower and the guy resides in an Alzheimer’s old folks home at 1234 Yellow Brick Road in Oz, Kansas. I’m getting rather tired of it. No one got this heated up about Benghazi. That was like forgetting the air cover for the Bay of Pigs invasion in ’61. Where’s the outrage about Congress raiding the SSA Trust fund and slipping in an IOU? And now they espouse $55 trillion for free college and Medicare for all regardless of your immigration status? Helloooooooooooooooo????

The subject above has nothing to do with McWhorter. It’s just that I keep seeing articles in this same news feed from my good friends at Attig Steel and CCK with all kinds of helpful advice on how to win your claims. Granted, imitation is the dernier cri in flattery. I began teaching the Caluza/Hickson/Shedden  theory in 2008 after my 28-year fight to a win and wrote the “What You Need to Succeed” book in 2012. I’ve done a bunch of shows with John and Jerrell on Hadit.com over the ensuing years on this subject-et voilà- the big guns are finally beginning to follow suit. Don’t get me wrong. Veterans need all the help they can get. That’s the primary reason I began this blog.

Every law dog or Johnny Veteran should have a list of go-to cites to insert in a brief or argument. Either you’re arguing case (law) or you’re arguing controversy (what the facts really are). You can’t just dial up Westlaw every time you need the perfect cite. That’s $60 a minute and most Veterans cannot afford this level of extravagance. I used CAVC and BVA decisions to find my perfect cites until I discovered NVLSP’s Veterans Benefits Manual. Nevertheless, I still use the BVA  because the search engine on the BVA site is extremely phenomenal. The CAVC search bar is so-so in my mind.

I now collect and assemble the perfect cites as I run across them at the CAVC. When I began this journey unassisted in 2007 (the fourth time), I read every single CAVC decision written from 1989 to 1995. By the time I reached  Caluza v. Brown, I  finally began to “get it”. Those early, formative years of the COVA contain some killer cites which, while maybe having been relitigated by panels at a later, more recent date, still base their logic on much of this 25-30 year old precedence. Almost all these golden oldies imported Federal Circuit precedence which became the early framework for conversion by the COVA and fashioned into Veterans law with a heapin’ helpin’ of Boone v. Lightner. Always remember, VA law has a thumb firmly placed on the Veterans’ side of the scale of justice. Or at least it should.

Every law firm, as I say, including the DAV, VFW/ YOUR VSO etc. has their favorite ten or so cases that embody certain presumptions or case law that give Veterans a leg up. In this day and age of the new AMA, we are encountering gross errors and proof that haste makes waste. Either that or the old adage that Idle hands are the Devil’s Workshop is still a valid observation. Regardless, we are seeing a race to the bottom for legal ineptness now at the VA. This puts an inordinate amount of pressure on HLRs and most especially the BVA. Sadly, they are failing us. There’s a new, post-AMA stare decisis format afoot that embodies and espouses the new, endless Hamster Wheel litigation method.

I get NWQ decisions back with wild and woolly errors every month. I have to track down and call up (or email) the DRO Coach and politely ask what they were smoking in the alley during lunch break that day. If they shine me on, I cc: it to the AMO Big Guy with the initials D.M. back in DC. Miracles of miracles, the promulgated decision magically disappears from VBMS and it’s back in the EP 499 NWQ hopper for another week to remodel it. Funny, I didn’t think you could “erase” anything in VBMS-or VACOLS for that matter. Boy howdy was I ever wrong. Gene Groves put paid to that lie ten years ago when he outed the VA’s “backdoor” to VACOLS.  That’s why I always screen grab it when I see it and save it as a .jpg. The evidence comes in handy later when the Secretary trots out his post hoc rationale for prior Agency action which, noticeably, doesn’t encompass his development actions.

This can be extremely valuable at the BVA when the WACO VSCM says the defective Rating Decision “never happened.” Of all precedence, I have been dragging out an Oldie to combat this notion that a rater can say “We denied you based on this”. Most recently, since 2/19/2019, if you resubmit anything new into evidence, they merely move sideways and change the logic for the denial to comport with defeating your new contention. Litigators used to combat this inane propensity with Martin v OSHC in the past.  This is why McWhorter now has more “punch”. It’s been sitting in the CAVC basement almost 30 years and rarely cited.

MacWhorter_90-935a

MacWhorter_90-935b

The accepted legal essence of McWhorter generally overlooks its extra inferences. Here’s the gist.  Let’s say you file a claim for Hepatitis C and claim alien abduction s/p brain transplant as one of your risk factors (in addition to the accepted HCV risk factors). The Secretary says it (the Hep C) isn’t related to jetguns, shared razors, unsafe sexual practices or shooting up with shared syringes. He says you were born between 1945 and 1965 and that’s what probably did it. However, let’s say he fails to rule out the alien abduction and artificial brain implant with unsterilized alien surgical implements as being the risk factor. On appeal you win because by not specifically denying infection of Hep C predicated on that risk factor, the Secretary essentially concedes the risk. That’s a very simplified explanation…

MacWhorter v. Derwinski, 2 Vet.App. 133, 136 (1991). “Yet,[w]here [an] appellant has presented a legally plausible position . . . and the Secretary has failed to respond appropriately, the Court deems itself free to assume . . . the points raised by [the] appellant, and ignored by [VA], to be conceded.”

see also Mari v. Shinseki, No. 08-1175, 2009 U.S. App. Vet. Claims LEXIS 1545, at *4-5 (Vet. App. Aug. 31, 2009) (nonprecedential) (“[T]he Court deems conceded ‘points raised by appellant, and ignored by the [Secretary].’”).

Now, I’m not saying being abducted by aliens is a viable, credible risk. I merely use it as a off-the-wall humorous example.  Look further.  How about once the Secretary says your claim for bladder cancer is not related to your exposure to Camp Lejeune water contamination, you bring out the direct service connection path and say working in the motor pool with excessive benzene exposure did it. VA can’t keep changing positions. Once they fail to plug a hole (read rebut) on a reasonably filed claim for benefits, it’s fair game. If they focus on the presumptive and ignore the direct, you yell Combee v Brown and hand them an IMO. Bingo. You’re a chicken dinner winner. Hart v. Mansfield/ Mariano v. Principi/Kahana v. Shinseki and its progeny prevent them from chasing down a Hoodoo Lane in search of a pliable VA examiner willing to accept 30 pieces of silver to rewrite a viable denial. Correction. It’s probably more like 36 pieces of silver due to COLA nowadays. I love Hart:

Mariano v Principi, 17 Vet.App. at 312,  states that it “would not be permissible for VA to undertake such additional development if a purpose was to obtain evidence against an appellant’s case.”  This single sentence, although rendered without further explanation, states a broad, general proposition, that was revisited by the Court in Hart v. Mansfield, 21 Vet.App. 505 (2007). Hart stated that additional development is not permitted “if the purpose was to obtain evidence against the claim,” and further noted that if the evidence was insufficient to make a decision on the claim, then the Secretary was required to obtain a medical examination. 

Even though the presumption of regularity of VA doctors is protected by Sickels v. Shinseki, as a litigator or a DIY pro se claimant, you should be begging for Chevron deference and  make the Secretary choke on his own 38 CFR. Never ignore Chevron. It can be your huckleberry in a lot of instances.

Justice Mary Schoelen w/ author

At Fall NOVA, during the Friday evening Adult Beverage Consumption Hour post-conference, I asked Judge Mary Schoelen what she considered her most famous legal contribution to Veterans Law. She confided that there were so many it was hard to pick a favorite. I get that. When you have 15 years devoted to the betterment of Veterans Law, it can be a daunting task to pick only one.

Distilled to its essence, my 10 personal favorites which I use  religiously, are the ones which confer lay credibility (Layno v. Brown), sympathetic development (Moody v. Principi), inferior legal assistance (Comer v. Peake), reasonably raised claims or arguments (Robinson v. Peake), agency deference(Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.) , you’re not a doctor so why would VA grant you that distinction when they don’t in Layno? (Clemons v. Shinseki), maximizing SMC (Buie v. Shinseki/Bradley v. Peake), going for the highest and best rating attainable (AB v. Brown)  and lastly the correct reading of 3.303(b)-[T]he regulation, 38 CFR §3.303(b) requires continuity of symptomatology, not continuity of treatment) (Wilson v. Derwinski) . I have more but these are my go-to barn burners. And of course McWhorter.

Patricia McWhorter’s epic saga is becoming ever more useful now based on the recent  proclivity of the Secretary to change or alter his decision rationale on your claim after the  initial denial in the subsequent 0995 Supplemental claim denial. It’s becoming ever more difficult to keep the claim/reopening on point short of filing a VAF 10182 NOD and taking it up to the BVA. Even then, I recently hit the wall on this with VLJ Cherry Crawford. She refused to talk about tinnitus secondary to getting blown up by a 60mm Gook mortar round. The logic? Why, he didn’t file for tinnitus. He filed for perforated eardrums (bilateral). If he wanted SC for tinnitus (which he couldn’t even spell), he should have said so. No tickee-no laundry. So what if he stated at the C&P exam that “I have ringing in my right ear”. So what if they noted in the EENT exam four days later that he indeed did have tinnitus. No dice. He didn’t file for it. No sympathetic development here. Move along. Nothing to see, folks.

VA Justice should not require a VA lawyer in our nonadversarial, Veteran-friendly ex parte justice system. If your records show a clear causation for your ills in service, you should not have to engage in a 5-year battle over acute versus chronic. My greatest joy was finding Caluza v. Brown and the VA’s Rosetta Stone for winning my claims. This is why I enjoy such an incredible win/loss rate (1500-ish/2). An IMO is like an American Express card- Don’t leave home to litigate without one.


Pour votre amusement:

Posted in All about Veterans, Appeals Modernization Act, CAVC Knowledge, CAVC/COVA Decision, Humor, Inferred claims, Informal Claims, KP Veterans, SMC, Tips and Tricks, VA Agents | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Pres. Trump spends Thanksgiving in Afghanistan with the troops

Today, let’s forget politics!  This trip is a welcome morale booster for tomorrow’s veterans.

Presidential Proclamation on Thanksgiving Day, 2019–released 11/28/19.  (LINK)

….This Thanksgiving, we pause and acknowledge those who will have empty seats at their table.  We ask God to watch over our service members, especially those whose selfless commitment to serving our country and defending our sacred liberty has called them to duty overseas during the holiday season.  We also pray for our law enforcement officials and first responders as they carry out their duties to protect and serve our communities.  As a Nation, we owe a debt of gratitude to both those who take an oath to safeguard us and our way of life as well as to their families, and we salute them for their immeasurable sacrifices….

Happy Thanksgiving, Laura (Kiedove/Guest author)

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

A LRRP THANKSGIVING

Only a LRRP like my good fried Ed would search far and wide to find this kind of humor. Happy Thanksgiving to all and a quick preliminary intro to Christmas humor. 

And the new Apple I- 11 gun commercial

Last but not least, from the Eastern Entertainment Capitol of the World, I bring Bruce Almighty’s latest Christmas humor.

Posted in Humor, KP Veterans, VA Agents, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

When not to “Take the Pain”–New Urgent Care benefit for VA enrollees

Shut up! It’s Sunday!

Bill jargon.  Yawn. But stay with me for a little while because the Urgent Care* benefit is worth knowing about– especially for veterans who only have VA health care.

VA > Health Care > Community Care > Urgent Care: LINK.

The old VA Patient’s Choice cards program are toast now that the Mission Act of 2018 (S. 2372) is enacted but gotcha’s still exist. (Gotcha is VA’s middle name.)  An ominous  “Scope of Care”example from Federal Register Final Rule:

VA will not provide an exhaustive list to account for the needed flexibility in administering the benefit. VA will monitor utilization of this benefit and may make further revisions to the website in the future. Any services provided that are outside of the scope of this benefit are the financial liability of the veteran.

But, but…the scope of care is not defined for patients and providers. And where are the promised educational Sec. 120 materials?  

Page 6, Mission Act LINK

‘‘(2) The Secretary may limit the types of hospital care, medical services, or extended care services covered veterans
may receive under paragraph (1) in terms of the length of time such care and services will be available, the location
at which such care and services will be available, and the
clinical care and services that will be available.

Congress says, ‘‘§ 1725A. Access to walk-in care  (Sec. 105, page 20-21)  “The Secretary shall develop procedures to ensure that eligible veterans
are able to access walk-in care from qualifying non-Department
entities or providers.”

This commandment makes sense but limits local providers because most are not connected to VA virtually and rely on fax machines.  Therefore a “continuity of care” method may not qualify as a suitable “…establishment of a mechanism to receive medical records from walk-in care providers and provide pertinent patient medical records to providers of walk-in care.”
Result? A puny list of network providers.

The Secretary may enter into contracts and set copayments.
‘‘(h) WALK-IN CARE DEFINED.—”…means non-emergent care provided by a qualifying non Department entity or provider that furnishes episodic care and not longitudinal management of conditions….”

The VA Urgent website gives a very short list of covered services, much shorter than services often available. Vets and non-VA regional hospitals have been burnt badly by promised but unpaid non-VA emergency room visits. Will this negative history repeat itself with this “high value” health program?  Some locations, like Walgreens, can give free flu shots, but don’t even think about getting any free routine preventative services at urgent care even if they could be combined with an urgent care treatment at a low cost to VA!

Are you eligible for zero ($) copays or $30 copay visits and RX (14 days max)? This depends on your Priority Group and VA-enrollment status within the last 24 months.  Caveats–unknown issues:  Service-connection copays?  How does other health insurance influence payments? 

Overview (again) page with video: https://www.va.gov/COMMUNITYCARE/programs/veterans/Urgent_Care.asp#Medication

To find contracted Urgent Care use Tricare’s imperfect locator (Call before going):

Step 1. Read the locator warning page:  https://vaurgentcarelocator.triwest.com/

Step. 2 Scroll down and Pick

VA Urgent Care and Retail Locations

https://vaurgentcarelocator.triwest.com/Locator/Care

or VA Urgent Care Pharmacy Locations

https://vaurgentcarelocator.triwest.com/Locator/RX

To see inside the rule-makers tricky minds–check out the Final Urgent Care rule. Also, it’s interesting to read the commenters thoughts about copayments and VA’s responses.

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/06/05/2019-11468/urgent-care

*  “VA refers to this benefit as urgent care, instead of walk-in care. This benefit will include care provided at both urgent care facilities and walk-in retail health clinics.

So if it is the weekend, and darn it, you’ve fractured your finger, been bitten by a deer tick, or python, or merely sliced your skin wide open for viruses to “come-on-in”–doing something reckless with rusty metal…why delay?  You’re probably covered but ask questions.  Bring your VA ID and see a VA-network doctor close to home–fast!  

by Laura (Kiedove/Guest Author)

BAD THIS YEAR IN NEW ENGLAND— The Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, is spread through the bite of infected ticks. The blacklegged tick (or deer tick, Ixodes scapularis) spreads the disease in the northeastern, mid-Atlantic, and north-central United States. The western blacklegged tick (Ixodes pacificus) spreads the disease on the Pacific Coast. Image: CDC  Click for article

Posted in All about Veterans, Food for thought, General Messages, Guest authors, Medical News, non-va care, Tips and Tricks, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

LZ GRAMBO–WHEEL IN THE SKY KEEPS ON TURNING

Permit me to ask you, my readership, to welcome another LRRP (pronounced Lurp) who joined the asknod Win or Die Club this week. Say Hi to Eric. The entry fee was his IHD from too much AO for breakfast. To give you an idea of what timber Eric’s cut from, let me share his redacted 214-215 below. He’s buddies with Ed the LRRP I wrote about earlier this Fall.  Seems I’m a little bit like them. I didn’t get any of my medals when I separated either.

ERIC THE LRRP 214-215

 

I was peeved I was shown the exit prior to my parade and medal presentation. It took me 43 years to extract them from the cold, deadly hands of the USAF. Ed the LRRP had buddies he served with and his commanding officer who put him in for a Silver Star back in 2014. He was my neighbor for a few years and just moved down to the south Portland Willamette River exurbs. We did lunch together at Fall NOVA this year. Ed’s the one who sends me lots of the funny stuff I put on here. Unfortunately, Ed’s filter is broken so I have to vet his submittals. When you actually survive a war with a few dings and holes, your perspective changes. A good car becomes one which can do 140. You become bulletproof right up until the time when you discover you aren’t. You think humor is how you look at it. I agree. I sat down one day for lunch in LS 15 Ban Nam on a stack of body bags because it was softer than sitting on the ground. What the hey? The folks were dead. They made damn good furniture. If I’d had more time, I could have fashioned a crudely shaped recliner.  Rigor mortis hadn’t set in yet. Necessitas est ingenii mater.

Eric the LRRP enlisted in 1965 from Idaho and is now back, retired there and loving it. He, too, went back to set the record straight in 2014 and added two Bronze Stars with Combat V and OLC.

Back in our day, in Vietnam (in the Army), the Commander got a Silver Star for  hunkering down in the TOC during the firefight with two flak vests on-with one fashioned like a diaper. The platoon commander (Slats) would get the Bronze Star and the Grunt usually got an Army Commendation Medal-with the Squad Leader maybe getting a V for valor on it. Murphy was entirely correct in positing that Shit rolls downhill- mostly to your disadvantage. Call it Military Politics. Nowadays, every Dick and Jane with an O-2 or higher rating seems to garner a Bronze Star just for a 30- minute layover to refuel in Balad. Shoot. Look at Senator Lyndsey Graham ( no relationship to me). He was a lawyer over there for a month and has a Bronze Star. They all have Berets to make them feel “inclusive” and elite. They still have “I was there” medals to pump up morale, too. Shoot, I forgot to mention Combat Action Badges saying you were within 90 miles of the front line and could actually hear the artillery. No, I’m just kidding. War is Hell. Vietnam was just a speshull kind of hell with 15 year old food.

Of course, now that I did the right thing for Eric, he belatedly decided to mention  the right hand he took the AK round through is getting funky. It’s hard to use a fork and he sometimes looses the spoon to the peripheral neuropathy. His PTSD is getting worse because.. well, hell watch the news is why. Everybody wants to sell their digs in California before they burn or the ice creme melts and move up to… Idaho. There goes Eric’s neighborhood.  After all this, I’m guessing he’s a candidate for TDIU so we’re going to cut some young bamboo and dig us a VA Punji pit. I love VA poker.

I’d like to wish you all a very happy Thanksgiving. Cupcake and I had some ups and downs with the cancer (her) and the kidneys(me). The wheel in the sky will keep on turning and I’m pretty sure we all will too. I’d give my left nut to get fifty more years of torturing the Department of Veterans Appeals. I never thought it would be the left kidney.  Considering I never thought I’d get out of Southeast Asia alive, this added time to my life is all gravy.

Posted in Agent Orange, All about Veterans, FACE HUMOR, Humor, Inspirational Veterans, KP Veterans, VA Agents | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

VETERANS DAY 2019–UDORN RTAFB– MY BAND OF BROTHERS

Ray w/ captured DShK .51 cal. in 7th ACCS aircrew briefing room

Yet another Veterans Day story in the “pages of our war” lives. This one hits closer to home for me on several different levels. I wish to introduce you to Ray from Texas. Once upon a time, Ray served over me in a  C-130 with a Theatre Air Control suite. Several air controllers could summons and direct vast air assets where needed. Ray’s 130 flew a racetrack pattern over Military Region II (MRII)- code name Barrel Roll. South of us along the Vietnam/Laos border was a similar MR III called Steel Tiger. Most of it was unrecognizable at 32,000 ASL. Hillsboro’s racetrack pattern was primarily over the Plaine des Jars… once upon a time… in a farwaway country that rhymed with “mouse”. My nondisclosure agreement expires next September 20th (2020) or I’d go into greater detail. It’s a dilly of a story. It makes Terry and the Pirates look like a bunch of Snowflakes.

His was often the voice that greeted us on 118.9 Mhz upcountry when we called in requests for air strikes. His call sign was Hillsboro. The nighttime version of this was Cricket.  In all probability, I probably talked to this man more than once 49 years ago. That he would find me, Buckwheat,  and seek representation for AO in Thailand is a fantastic coincidence. Even more so, that I could take his BVA remand and turn it in to a full-blown route in his favor is better than a Supersized Roy Rodgers with three maraschino cherries and extra juice. You get better odds on  Scratch and Sniff Lotto tickets for $1000.

Ray in front of Hillsboro Operations Hqrs. Udorn RTAFB 1970

Of all Vets, even as a Thailand-based Vet, Ray should not have had to fight this fight. He was aircrew and they often had to beat feet and land at Da Nang or Cam Ranh if the NVAF sent any Migs up to snoop around. With that testimony and his Air Medal showing combat, he should have been granted presumptive exposure and not been put through five years of pure hell. Prostate cancer and the post-cancer residuals are pretty nasty. Throw in some serious DM II/PN and you have a world of misery on top of your VA claims.

Ray came to me and needed a repair order. What kind, he was unsure of. I made no bones about it about ten seconds after I got my CMA to expedite the Power of Attorney in VA’s computer. I plumb laid into the David Koresh Memorial Regional Office in Whacko, Texas. I let them know this was not going to be a Texas Necktie Party on my watch. I made it clear I was getting a SME (Subject Matter Expert) IMO (Independent Medical Opinion) to rebut anything they came up with for a new hangman’s noose and a fresh horse. I just didn’t say when. Within a month, some gomer GS-13 with a goofy voice named Fred McGonagil or similar rings me up and says he’s figured this all out. Stay with me now. This is going to grate on some of you Thailand Vets’ ears if you’ve been fighting this thing for a while.

Since our boy Ray had to pack up the 7th ACCS’s paraphernalia and take it from Udorn to Korat RTAFB via a deuce and half in ’71 when they relocated, it stood to reason that he had to have gone off base and was exposed to- guess what?- AO- or rather ‘tactical herbicides’- in polite Thai parlance. The King had forbidden its spraying in his country. He wasn’t any dummy. By now, he’d had a decade to appreciate what Agents Pink, Green, Purple and Super Orange had wrought in Laos and the Vietnams. I guess he figured A White and A Blue were not quite so toxic. Fat chance. Worse, when we quit spraying it in the RVN, they just transshipped all the leftovers where it was needed… around the inside perimeters of our bases in Thailand.

Ray airborne in ABCC A/C over MR II circa 1971.

You can see why this dog won’t hunt. AO (or whatever) was sprayed, as I just mentioned above, inside the perimeter to keep firing lines clear. Of course, if the gooks got inside the wire, our barracks were about 40 feet away anyway. We would have been toast in seconds but every one of us already walked through AO to go anywhere on base. If exposure was to be granted for being outside the wire, it brings into question all the troops who went off base every weekend to go drinking.

So, my guess is they did some JSRRC (Joint Services Records Research Center)  sniffing and the command history of the 7th ACCS popped up showing occasional diversions to a RVN base. What better way to dodge the stupidity bullet and admitting your ignorance when you can unilaterally alter the regulations by granting SC for being off base. Who will ever know? About everyone who reads this blog, I hope. Hell, based on this, having a STD should automatically give all of you Thai Vets presumptive status, right?

Regardless, VA has screwed up as only they can. §3.103(c), written by our beloved Secretary, states in no uncertain terms…

38 CFR § 3.103 – Procedural due process and other rights.

§ 3.103 Procedural due process and other rights.

(a) Statement of policy. Every claimant has the right to written notice of the decision made on his or her claim, the right to a hearing, and the right of representation. Proceedings before VA are ex parte in nature, and it is the obligation of VA to assist a claimant in developing the facts pertinent to the claim and to render a decision which grants every benefit that can be supported in law while protecting the interests of the Government. The provisions of this section apply to all claims for benefits and relief, and decisions thereon, within the purview of this part 3.

That’s pretty powerful Ju-Ju. What it means is VA forgot to grant Ray SMC K for loss of use of a creative organ. Worse, they short-sheeted him on SMC S as well. Buie v. Shinseki is unequivocal that you must maximize any award and most especially SMC awards. Having prostate cancer sort of screws things up as only VA knows. Worser, DM II also does, too. Worser yet, VA knows all this. How can they feign medical ignorance?

Ray got 20% for DM II, 40 % for PN R upper, 30% for L PN upper, 20% for L lower PN ; 20% for R Lower PN, 20% L lower femoral nerve PN and 20% R Lower femoral nerve PN. As you VA mathematicians can add, this is 82% (plus the bilateral factor if you’re terribly anal). Most importantly though, one of the DM II ratings is 40% or more with the balance adding up to 70% or more entitling Ray to TDIU consideration. Equally, a rating for Prostate cancer s/p remission at 60% is also equally entitled to consideration for TDIU.

VA chose to add all these ratings up to arrive at a “combined” rating of 100% or greater. However, this is incorrect. The proper way was to grant TDIU for the 60% s/p Prostate residuals and grant SMC K for LOU plus SMC S for an independently ratable 80% for the residuals of DM II. Or, in the obverse, grant TDIU for the DM II plus residuals and award SMC S for the 60% s/p Prostate. Six of one and half a dozen of another. Trust VA to come up with the least benefit possible. This is becoming the norm in VA “cost-cutting” since the AMA was dreamed up back in 2017.

So, it’s back up to the BVA hamster wheel for a few more months for poor Ray. One of these days you folks will believe me when I say VA is not your BFF. Anyway, it’s one hell of a Veterans Day warm, fuzzy tale and its entirely true, or will be, on 9/23/2020. Thank you Ray for trusting your appeals to me. I hope I passed the audition. Here’s a great shot of Ray and Muriel. It’s why I so love doing this work. You just can’t make this stuff up.

As a P.S. I wish to thank my local Les Schwab Tire Store in Gig Harbor, Washington for fixing two of my tires this morning for free and they weren’t even purchased there. The young man refused payment…and thanked me for my service. I knew that “I served in Vietnam” bumper sticker would pay off eventually. Did any of you know Les Schwab was a Veteran, too? 

 

 

 

Posted in Agent Orange, All about Veterans, DM II, From the footlocker, KP Veterans, SMC, Thailand AO presumptive path, Tips and Tricks, VA Agents, Veterans Day, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

The Color of Kabul—Veteran artists impress

Happy Veterans Day!

The VA runs social programs designed to build morale and skills by doing enjoyable things.  One just finished in Kalamazoo, Michigan (Oct. 28 -Nov.3).  It was called the National Veterans Creative Arts Competition and Festival. (LINK) The sponsors were the Am. Legion Auxiliary and Battle Creek VHA.

I’ve choosen four 1st Place Winners to share in honor of Veterans Day and in appreciation to all who shared their gifts with others.

The Color of Kabul

The Color of Kabul Military, Combat Experience, by Dennis Linn 2019 NVCA Competition   Click for larger image.

Lady in Bed

Lady in Bed, Oil Painting,  Jerry Zabel 2019 NVCA Competition   Click for larger image.

 

A Sacred Resting Place, Carving , John Lopez 2019 NVCA Competition  Click for larger image.

Sky Blue on Seven Mile Creek Pastels Richard Babcock 2019 NVCA Competition   Click for larger image.

National Veterans Sports Programs & Special Events
FAC T SHEET (LINK)

VA’s Flickr shows many different examples of the fine arts and folk arts that were in the exhibitions.  Enjoy: https://www.flickr.com/photos/veteransaffairs/albums

The above works are “museum” quality; congrats to all the creators uploaded on Flickr.  Beautiful work.

Guest author:  Laura (Kiedove)

 

Posted in All about Veterans, Food for the soul, Food for thought, Future Veterans, General Messages, Guest authors, Uncategorized, vA news, Veterans arts, Veterans Day | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

CAVC–#19-7301–LZ CORK-BUTCH’S LAST STAND

I guess that header will grab you by the eyeballs if nothing else doesn’t. Yes, Ladies and Gentleman Veterans, to plagiarize a horse-racing term, I am finally busting my maiden as “First Chair” as litigators refer to the lead attorney at the Federal Circuit-or hell- any circuit for all I know about this shit. Remember, I’ve been flying by the seat of my pants in this VA law business now for all of three years and two months that I can admit to legally. My DIY “help” blog and book could have been used to prosecute me back in a more litigious-minded era a decade or three ago-but hold the phone, Joan. Speaking of the Devil.

Wait until I tell you about them spilling the beans at the Portland Fall NOVA extravaganza about all these hokey-paloky companies who play VA Sherpa and charge you $(XXX),XXX.OO or about 40% of your gross retro befoooooooore any shekels for the 20% attorney/agent fee. But wait. They get to fill in the blanks for all the “IMO”s and “Vocational Expert-Employability” costs with one of those fancy LRC, MMR CRI suffixes. Like  the VA rater’s gonna know what they are, right? No way. They’re looking for M.D. or ARNP. Okay. Imagine getting $50 K retro as a nice round figure. Your law dog, assuming you can never win using a VSO, gets 20% of this. It pays for the office, the secretaries, the $10,000 copy machine, six computers and a server. It pays for one of those secretaries whom is going to be a a paralegal. More $$.  It pays for the electricity, the internet hookup and a whole lot more. So that’s pretty straightforward. Oh, and that $200,000.00 student loan has to be serviced along with your home mortgage etc. So you cough up $10 K to the law dog and take home $40 K in the real world. But, if you fell for the ploy of getting a bush-league IMO (Independent Medical Opinion) from anyone but a top-drawer outfit like Mednick Associates and paid twice the price, watch out. If you can’t even spell the guy’s last name-let alone pronounce it (and his address is  1234 RR # 1, Lahore, Pakistan (did I mention that before?), you may be in for a rude surprise. Did I mention they don’t charge if you lose? So you’ve got that going for you.

See? You find out why DAV, VFW, AmVets, AmLeg, **P  and the other 144 Veterans Service Organizations do it for free. It’s also why only 12% of you prevail and win. This isn’t Powerball Lotto luck. It’s a science with a defined recipe for instant success.  This is why I’m a “practitioner” as they define me. I’m no longer a bystander. There are two kinds- a VA attorney or a VA Agent. If you are admitted to the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, they promote you to “nonattorney practitioner”. I was granted that austere honor in November 2017-a day that will live in infamy for Shulkin and his progeny. Since the Court is always right in everything they do, I’m not going to pester them and tell them the “Esq.” after my name is incorrect. They’ll figure it out. What the hey. Maybe I got one of those “honorary degrees” in law and slept through it. Shit happens when you get old.

The Statute and Regulation permit only accredited legal help. It’s not a very exclusive club. Thousands and thousands all have their hats in this ring for Pension work/A&A in old folks’ homes. There is the second group who specialize in true litigation-benefits. NOVA consists of the creme de la creme of VA practitioners.  So if you used one of these new illegal interlopers with no VA accreditation,  they have no legal standing to sue you for failure to pay them. Let’s look at this.

The regulations are easy to read. §§14.628- ,636 explains it all. Twenty percent is the norm if you let VA collect it and give it to the lawyer. You never see it. Hey, they earned it in 99% of the cases I see.  A VSO guarantees 100% of nothing and invariably delivers- for the advertized price (free).Then there are the “bigwigs” who charge up to 33%. You can do this if you agree with your leagle beagle that you will pay him directly and cut out the VA middleman. I would never think of  charging more than 20%. Now throw in a 40% pre-gross rider from  your new Sherpa VA bloodsucker. Should be easy peasy shooting to put this scoundrel in jail for practicing without a license? Ne c’est pas?

BVA Chairman Cheryl Mason

That very question was asked in front of not only Board of Veterans Appeals Chairman Cheryl Mason and Director, AMC -Mr. David McLenachen. I deeply respect both of them. They are, by financial necessity, a captive audience and are not expected to bite the hand that feeds them. Nevertheless, it is interesting to note that they were the ones to let the cat out of the bag. As officers of the court, they aren’t allowed to lie. The VA Office of Accreditation(OGC 21 D) nor the VA Office of Inspector General (VAOIG) has made any concerted effort whatsoever, to quash this new obscenity. Worse, a new one is popping up every month! The excuse seems to be a quandary over just who has judicial authority to ask for an indictment to desist or to enact a congressional statute to specifically forbid it with monetary and/or incarceration penalties. While VASEC fiddles,  810 Vermont Ave NW burns.

LZ CORK

Back to LZ Cork. If you’ve been reading any the 42 blogs that come up on the Search bar, you know all about  my neighbors Butch and Barb. This all began over a missing Purple Heart back in 2012-or early 13. I disremember exactly when Butch and I hooked up and had a beer summit in downtown Key Center, Washington. We live there. The town is like a John Denver song.

After mulling over my second loss in over a thousand, I’m satisfied that it’s not case or controversy so much as the money. We’re talking about an incredible amount and I don’t mind saying so. It’s always the 800-pound-elephant-on-the-sofa conversation topic but no one ever says so to my face. VA always calls it a “travesty of Justice” or an unfortunate confluence of events that created the fustercluck but ‘we made it right in 2015 so it’s all better. We’ll have no talk of §3.156(c) (1)(3)(4) here. There’s no claim.” Poof. Back to work. I choose to agree. When I set out on this journey, there was never any money in it for me. Nor, by law, was there any when they won in December 2015. Since I had begun my quest to become an agent in 2015 before they ever filed, it cannot be said with any certainty that I would become accredited in time to benefit financially. VA likes to say Justice Delayed is not Justice Denied. (Caffrey v. Brown). Horseshit, I say. It’s a matter of honor now for Butch. You call a man a liar who has a Purple Heart and CIB and you may get a spirited discussion on the subject. I think that falls into the category of a #ExistentialThreattoVeterans.

Cupcake and I have invested an incredible amount of our lives to this project-not just Butch and Barb. I saw a BlueBloods show last night about Project Innocence legal clinics and their worth. I read a great novel to and fro from Phoenix about the same subject- John Grisham’s  The Guardian. Great book. I liken myself to them. Our object in VA law is not to exonerate an accused felon. It’s to exonerate a Veteran wronged of his entitlement under law. I refuse to drag out all the eggs to omelettes analogies. Suffice it to say, I’ve discussed this with Butch and Barb many a time. We’ve had two noticeable financial successes but true entitlement- and a clear path to it legally-is simply too much to swallow for the VA fisc without a good fight. I expect I’ll be citing a lot of Martin v. Occupational Safety & Health Review Comm’n, 499 U.S. 144, 156 (1991) (explaining that “litigating positions’ are not entitled to deference when they are merely appellate counsel’s ‘post hoc rationalizations’ for prior agency action”). Thank you Mr. Martin.

I’m waiting on the Secretary to supply us with the damning Record Before the Agency (RBA) and a sixty day shot at the Rule 33 conference afterwards. The legal position is simple- no JMRs, No JPMRs. I want a Judge’s stamp order to remand this for implementation of entitlement to compensable TBI @ 30%, Tinnitus at 10%, headaches at 50%, and LOU of vision in the right eye @10% effective from 4/29/1970 RAD. That’s, of course, in addition to the 10% for the R hand SFW @10% and the new CUE of 10% for R Upper arm @ 10% which are now effective as of 4/29/1970. And, if I want to be a vindictive  asshole, I should ask for a Fenderson staged rating on all entitlements over the intercurrent fifty years. Here’s why you can do this.

Wilson v. Derwinski, 2 Vet. App. 16, 19 (1991)

The regulation (38 CFR §3.303(b) requires continuity

 of symptomatology, not continuity of treatment.

 

Think of that. You have the combat presumption under §1154b. Anything that comes out of your piehole is the truth regarding the etiology of your injuries and the resultant symptomatology that accompanies it for life. VA has to rebut your testimony of your symptomatology by clear and unmistakable evidence that rebuts your testimony. As anyone in this business knows, VA is held to the same CUE requirements we are. They don’t get a leg up in this dog and pony show. If there are no medical records to review in the last 50 years to make a determination, that is not the fault of Butch. Had they gone back to the NPRC to get the STRs, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. 

And that’s all I’m gonna say about that. Stay tuned on CM/EFR TV for an exciting conclusion to this now almost seven-year Odyssey.

Here’s the best of recent submissions. Humor is essential to life.

Posted in 3.156(c), All about Veterans, CAVC Knowledge, CUE, KP Veterans, LZ Cork, Tips and Tricks, VA Agents, Veterans Law, VSOs | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

BORN TO BE WILD–THE NEWEST 100%ER CLUB MEMBER

Airman Anne  Vet circa 1996

There’s just nothing like a good All Hallow’s Eve story. This one was brought to me by my East Coast supervisor of VA Justice.  I reckon that was back in Summer 2018. Bruce McCartney is renowned throughout the Southeast States’ ROs as one who is not afraid to confront injustice. Especially so when it’s a fellow lady in VA distress. Meet Miz Anne from Del Rio, Tennessee. 

 

I get irritated more than I can say when folks say we (I and my fellow NOVA Members) are nothing more than VA Ambulance chasers. Considering most  attorneys who pursue similar law in the civilian sector get at least a 40% fee and instant payouts, that dog won’t hunt. In the same vein, I’ve been accused of ignoring pro bono Vets whose claims will not earn me any baksheesh. Again, that’s hooey. I just did two in a row this month- TDIU for one neighbor and one for a TBI secondary to driving over a mine in 1969 near An Loi.  The gal, Elaine, had been stuck at 70% + 10%+10%= 80% for 21 years. Everyone (read AmLeg/DAV/AmVets VA representatives) who had helped her over the years shrugged and threw up their hands when the Emerald City Memorial Regional Office 86’d her TDIU applications. She was basically a 100% TBI after a rollover in a ’64 VW Microbus just before separation. She said it was like being in a big washing machine with an untethered lawn mower.

Mr. An Loi (Stuart) with the Purple Heart also went through the washing machine after they drove over the anti-tank mine -inside a 18-wheeler tractor with his M 60 and eight ammo cans of  7.62 X 51 MM flying around his head. I got him up to 60% from 0%. I filed and Portland did just what I predicted. They granted rather than making me fight. Ergo, no fight = no samoles for me. Good deal. Maybe I’ll get to Heaven yet.  But let’s talk about our Queen for a Day- Mrs. Anne.

 ANNIE’S PORK AND BEANS

Shortly after Bruce Almighty sent Anne to me, she was on TV in Discovery Go’s Homestead Rescue- Season 4 Episode 3 Shock and Awe.   If you get a chance, set down a spell with a cold one and watch some real TV. It sure beats the Real Housewives of Memphis.

Anne’s new “off-grid” green power (120VAC rain or shine).

They also built her a small country store and the ability to have a reliable electrical source for her refrigerated goods. Life was getting better and now we add the VA game changer. Anne has been a candidate for 100% P&T for twenty or more years since she first filed. Like all of us, she didn’t gripe and complain when they gave her 10%. Until one day she did. VA blew her off and told her she had the vapors. Somebody told Bruce and Bruce told me. It was a case of “you’re it”. And here we are about 15 months later.

Back in the day, they’d call Anne’s condition “anxiety disorder” or “schizoid adaptation”. PTSD was pretty much reserved for combat Veterans. In the intervening years, psychiatrists began to recognize  PTSD could encompass any violent event- including Major Sexual Trauma (MST). Bent Brain Disorder is interesting. If the event is so overwhelming, many can’t remember the minutiae. They just remember the general gist of it. Some seem to have a stretchy rubber band upstairs and can recover from a stressor. For others, the rubber band breaks. Some of us sicko’s were really bent back in the 60s-70s and even signed up for a second tour.

 

Trick or Treat from the country that rhymed with ‘Mouse’

Anne’s shrink did a really bang up job and the VA recognized it. There was no way they were going to poke a hole in the bottom of this claim boat. That’s good. We don’t need a lot of VA theatrics and Kabuki theater shit. I think it took waaaay longer than it had to but then I’ve been radicalized. In fact it could be said I’ve weaponized the VBMS against the VA. Hey, if I call VA racist, we may even have a really good major media event. If I claim the VA is an existential threat to Veterans, we might even get National Coverage! I like all those newfangled progressive terms. Wish I’d known how this works in 1974.  It took 18 years just to get VA to admit concede I was even in Vietnam. Here’s a pic (above)of some of my BFFs and me all dressed up for Halloween 1970.  I dressed up  as  an armed French interpreter. Actually, my USAID ID announced my profession as French Teacher-a minor technicality.

Pages from Realiford Narrative 10-22-19

Anne and Rick will now have a far more financially secure future at a time when they could really use it. How cool is that? Here’s some great shots she sent me for this article. I don’t normally take PTSD cases because they are a real hand’s on project. This one, however, was ordained by God to be a success. Remember what the Crusaders used to yell when they charged  Muslim unbelievers? “Onwards for St. George! God sends the Right!”  I just pointed this thing in the right direction for her. Nothing more. It made a difference for that one.

Now if you’re motoring around wherever Del Rio, Tennessee is and you want some killer smoked pork or chicken, you make sure you give Anne’s store a shot. It’s called Annie’s Pork-and-Beans. You tell her and Ricky hi for me, hear?

starfish.JPG

 

Posted in 100% ratings, ASKNOD BOOK, Inspirational Veterans, MST, PTSD, Tips and Tricks, VA Agents | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments