« Reply #27 on: September 16, 2014, 07:14:55 PM »
I was lucky to find a room to rent in East Peoria for $250 a month, from the Father of a friend of mine. I live in the upstairs of his house, I have my own bathroom and a walk in closet, but no kitchen. And the $250 includes utilities, plus free Dish TV.
I can barely afford to live here, and with my internet bill and the co-pays on my medications I am slowly going broke. I just got a $274 truck insurance bill that is due October 1st and as of today I do not have the money to pay it.
I am still waiting on the ALJ appeal hearing on my SSI claim...
So I am still in a bad situation, even though my monthly bills are only about $300 a month I can not afford it. I do not know what I am going to do if I run out of money and can not pay my rent or my internet bills, I could get evicted, but I do not know if my landlord will let me make a late payment next month or let me go a month without paying the rent.
And right now I can not even pay my truck insurance, so after October 1st if I do not pay it I will have to drive with no insurance.
I am currently getting my medical care from the OFS Sisters Community Free Clinic...
I have been getting by (just barely) with a little money I had saved, a small life insurance policy he had of $1.000.
Right now all I get is food stamps and free health care from the OSF Sisters Community Clinic. I have no income and I have to find a way to pay the bills...
By the DUmp's standard of a "fetus", this clump of cells qualifies for immediate abortion.
« Last Edit: September 16, 2014, 08:11:18 PM by wasp69 »

Logged
"We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and then bid the geldings to be fruitful."
C.S. Lewis
A community may possess all the necessary moral qualifications, in so high a degree, as to be capable of self-government under the most adverse circumstances; while, on the other hand, another may be so sunk in ignorance and vice, as to be incapable of forming a conception of liberty, or of living, even when most favored by circumstances, under any other than an absolute and despotic government.
John C Calhoun, "Disquisition on Government", 1840