Happy Pride!
Every pride, you must reblog this. No exceptions
I love that four different people on my feed scheduled this joyous person to reblog by 8am on June 1. I look forward to seeing this a dozen more times today.
Three Goblin Art

titsay
No title available
macklin celebrini has autism

⁂
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Stranger Things
todays bird

shark vs the universe
Cosmic Funnies

Love Begins

izzy's playlists!

oozey mess
Claire Keane
will byers stan first human second
occasionally subtle

tannertan36
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
h

pixel skylines

seen from Sweden

seen from Belarus

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia

seen from Egypt

seen from Belarus
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Paraguay
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from France
seen from India
seen from Türkiye
@poehadka
Happy Pride!
Every pride, you must reblog this. No exceptions
I love that four different people on my feed scheduled this joyous person to reblog by 8am on June 1. I look forward to seeing this a dozen more times today.
reblog this and in the tags, write the band that comes to mind first when you think back to being 13 years old
TURN ON THE SOUND
“the potatoes”
When my mother forgets a word, she is the queen of coming up with new words. Words that would take a third National Treasure movie to fully decipher. I was talking to her yesterday, and she said this: “You know the time for los jibbities is coming up. You must be so excited!” Oh, is it time for los jibbities already? I must have missed it on my calendar. Are we celebrating something? “Of course! We should all be celebrating, shouldn’t we?” OK, so los jibbities is a happy thing. It’s not like something is giving you the heebie-jeebies, which would have been my one and only guess. “Los heebie-jeebies? Now you’re making things up...and this is my show.” You’re right. The time for los jibbities is coming up. Is this a season? “Yes, the season for love. The season for pride.” OK, los jibbities. “Yeah, sound it out.” Los…jibbities. LGBTs! “Sí, mira cuz you’re gay!” “You couldn’t just say pride season? You couldn’t just… *laughs*
HAPPY LOS JIBBITIES EVERYBODY!!!
THE MONTH FOR LOS JIBBITIES STARTS TOMORROW!
what kinda job do u have
phone call
smile + nod
other (cool job)
other (evil and mysterious)
no job/bald/hark to the music
Where you live, what natural disaster is most worrying? (Not including extreme hot/cold/drought)
earthquakes
floods
wildfires
tornadoes
hurricanes/cyclones
blizzards
something else (tags!)
results
I needed a place to load video so I could share with friends off disco.
behold, my half built basement library.
Whose 9 year old named this dinosaur
Coolest 9-y-o ever. Hope they know!
It’s named after Argentinian paleontologist Sebastian Apesteguia, whose nickname is “El Ninja”. It’s the oldest titanosaur they’ve found and might just be the largest dinosaur ever discovered.
@mr-crocodile
NEW DINOSAUR JUST DROPPED
NEW DINOSAUR JUST DROPPED
In celebration of Ming-Na Wen getting a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
(gif request by @maos2013)
The future sucks for the most part.
However, I just spent 5 bucks to release a popcorn treat through the live chat for a whole flock of chickens on the other side of the world in a different hemisphere, and I got to watch them enjoy it live.
And how wonderful is that?
Here is the YouTube channel, the way they’ve set it up is fascinating, take a look!
REBLOG FOR NOISES and also the link to the place where you can spend five bucks to give treats to chickens.
Insurance PSA Master Post from a Bitch Who Knows Her Shit and wants to make sure you don’t go bankrupt
Why am I littering your dash with mind-numbing insurance crap?
Because the world of health insurance is complicated, and you can still lose everything if you have coverage and fail to navigate it correctly.
Even if your eyes glaze over instantly at the subject, I suggest you bookmark this as a future reference, because you either have your own insurance now, or you will someday soon, and there isn’t anybody who doesn’t need this knowledge. (Yes, I know there’s a double negative in that sentence. This is a financial post, not a grammar post.)
If you think this is valuable info, I ask you to please share it. You could help somebody save money/sanity.
My cred:
I write health plan docs for a living. I’m an Obamacare expert. I help clients with plan design, so I know the tricks. I implement federal mandates from HHS, IRS, DOL, and state agencies in order to keep my clients legally compliant. I know how to avoid penalties and coverage gaps. I know the tricks of plan design that are implemented to save employers money. I know which laws apply to which types of plans. I know how many ways participants can get severely burned if they don’t know how this works.
1. Your network is everything.
Never visit any type of practitioner without first checking if they are in your network. This is gospel. Many plans have separate INN and OON deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums that do not accumulate together. Some plans have an unlimited OON out-of-pocket limit, so you can still go completely bankrupt if you go OON.
Most plans have network provisions that will cover some OON providers at the INN level: emergency services until you’re stabilized (this is a federal mandate for non-grandfathered plans), No Choice of Provider provision if ancillary services are performed OON (e.g., if an INN physician sends your labs to an OON facility), and various out-of-area provisions. If you don’t know, call the customer service number and ask.
Physicians join & leave networks all the time. Even if your doc isn’t listed in the most recent Provider Directory, it never hurts to ask.
Many plans also have wrap networks that will negotiate with OON providers and facilities, so if all else fails, ask if your plan utilizes one of these to negotiate on your behalf.
2. Understand when your deductible accumulates & resets.
Your deductible is the amount of $ you pay for all services & prescriptions (except mandated preventive care on non-grandfathered plans) before your insurance pays a dime. This is in addition to the $ you pay for your premium. If you’re on an HDHP (high deductible health plan) or CDHP (consumer-driven health plan), your premiums will be very low, but your deductible will be very high. I’m on an HDHP, and my individual deductible is $2,600. Steep.
Deductibles usually reset every January 1, but some plans run off-year. Know your dates. If you’re on an HDHP, use the hell out of the HSA (health savings account) if available.
3. Preventive care is free!! Woohoo!!
The Affordable Care Act mandates certain preventive services be covered with no cost-share.
You can find the list of services here: https://www.healthcare.gov/preventive-care-benefits/
The woman-specific list is here: https://www.healthcare.gov/preventive-care-benefits/women/
These lists are updated frequently, and new services are added every few months. My $500 Mirena IUD is now covered 100%, and the deductible is waived. The HPV vaccine is now covered for everybody between age 19-26. Depressing screening is covered. Tobacco cessation, immunizations, STI screening & counseling….all covered.
4. Preventive care isn’t free under every plan! Booo!!!
If your plan is grandfathered, they will likely opt to cover preventive services at the general benefit percent. The deductible will also apply. They are still allowed to exclude any preventive services they want.
Your plan document will (should) state whether your plan is grandfathered or not. If the doc is silent, call the carrier’s customer service line and ask.
5. Assume every EOB/bill you receive has at least 1 error, ESPECIALLY on hospital visits.
For the most part, claims processors have ZERO medical background. They’re paid just above minimum wage and are paid based on how many claims they process per hour. So you can guess how often errors happen.
I just had a preventive OBGYN claim come back as not covered, even though it should have been covered at 100%. If I didn’t know about the PPACA mandate, I would’ve just paid $219 out of my own pocket for an office visit that is supposed to be free.
You are paying enough/too much already for your premiums and deductibles. Make damn sure your claims are being processed and paid correctly. Raise hell if not, and get familiar with the appeals process.
6. Check your Medical Plan Exclusions before you go for any service.
Can’t stress this one enough.
7. Some plans offer surprisingly generous benefits such as 3-D mammography, genetic/genomic testing, acupuncture, and bariatric surgery.
Look at your Schedule of Benefits, but also check your Covered Charges for details on coverage and limitations.
There are federal mandates like the WHCRA, which requires all plans to cover the cost of breast reconstruction after mastectomy. Your plan document should have a section that lists federal notices.
The Mental Health Parity & Addiction Equity Act also requires plans to cover mental health & substance abuse services & facilities at the same level as the medical services & facilities. For example, a plan that covers a skilled nursing facility (medical) must also cover a residential treatment facility (MH). This is a bigger deal than it probably sounds like.
8. Check pre-certification requirements.
This is a cost containment strategy, and a lot of people aren’t even aware that covered charges are often denied/penalized if you don’t obtain pre-cert before the service. Again, check your plan document or call customer service. The most common services requiring pre-cert are: all hospitalizations (excluding routine labor/delivery), surgical procedures, transplants, clinical trials, outpatient rehab therapies, chemo & radiation, speciality drugs, home health care, durable medical equipment, prosthetics, and advanced imaging (MRI/MRA, CT scan, nuclear imaging, etc).
Any penalties you pay for failure to pre-cert won’t apply to your out-of-pocket maximum, so they really super suck. Some plans outright deny all claims for services that aren’t pre-certed.
9. You shouldn’t go broke.
Under PPACA, your in-network out-of-pocket maximum is limited. This means that you will never spend more than that amount in any year for covered services received from an in-network provider. The key here is the network, which I have to mention again since it is so critical.
Watch your EOBs carefully and monitor your accumulators (deductible and out-of-pocket limit). You can’t rely on the claims processors to get it right. I know it sucks and isn’t fair, but it’s the reality, and it’s your money on the line. There isn’t a claims processor or appeals lawyer in the world who will care more about your money than you do, so it really is up to you to be aware.
Godspeed, friends, and good health to you.
THIS NEEDS MORE NOTES
As much as this advice needs to be spread, it makes me so fucking furious that we live in a country where it needs to be spread.
And PSA #1 works adequately (I am not going to say well, because I think in/out of network is some of the worst of the bullshit of US health insurance) for most uncomplicated physical health needs.
Mental health? Not so much.
And if you get charged for failure to pre-cert, that’s the doc’s fault and you shouldn’t be responsible for the charges.
Also if you do get misbilled, don’t pay it - call to complain first, then ask if the doctor can submit anything to help
I once spent a year and half fighting an mri bill that they incorrectly labeled as frivolous until a doctor got involved
Also: keep calling. Get it in writing if you can. I just had a medically-necessary pre-cert-required drug not counted against my annual deductible (and our work shoved us all on high deductible plans which is SUPER GREAT for a family with 3 disabled people in it) because despite my calling multiple times and being assured it was taken care of, my pre-cert wasn’t done. Then I was told I could just pay for it out of pocket, and they would go back and count the drug against my deductible after the fact.
HA HA HA HA LIARS.
Also in my area the hospital is in-network but the ER doctors are out of network.
No shit.
For reference.
Thanks to my pituitary deciding to go from the size of a sunflower seed to a full sized grape, I get yearly MRI's.
The forking imaging suite INSIDE THE SAME HOSPITAL that did my surgery is out of network. Because the hospital decided to outsource it.
I made my neurosurgeon agree that I could use a different imaging location by pointing out the hospital charges $1400. The other place? $500.
In network and out of network is NO JOKE.
It’s so fascinating to me that we’ve only been breeding Komodo dragons in captivity for thirty years. In that time, our understanding of them has actually really revolutionized the way we understand the social lives and behaviors of lizards in general, and it’s mostly thanks to this lady right here, who was born 30 years ago on September 13, 1992.
Kraken was the first Komodo to be bred in captivity. She hatched out at GMU, but was raised at the National Zoo. Her parents were wild-caught dragons- there’s still WC dragons in the AZA today- and this one specific individual probably did more to revolutionize lizard care in professional settings than any other individual lizard throughout zoo history.
Until Kraken, social enrichment wasn’t a thing people thought about. It wasn’t something anybody felt was necessary for lizards, because they were just… lizards. Sure, some keepers would play with their favorites, but it wasn’t until the National Zoo started documenting what she was doing that anybody realized how much Komodo dragons like to play with us too.
Kraken’s not in that video, but she’s the one who inspired all of the social studies that have been done on captive Komodo dragons. When she was at the National Zoo, her keepers started getting curious when, for no apparent reason, she kept gingerly stealing things from peoples’ pockets and tugging on their shoelaces. So they started giving her stuff- Frisbees, blankets, soda cans, anything she showed an interest in.
She played with them, just like a mammal might. The way play behavior is described in psychology is a given activity that’s voluntary, repeated, and conducted under “relatively benign” circumstances. Keeper staff found that her conduct during the study met all of these criteria. “Kraken,” they wrote, had clearly demonstrated “play-like behavior with objects and even with humans (tug-of-war).” Moreover, she “could discriminate between prey and nonprey” while showing “varying responses” with different items (rubber rings, shoes, etc.). (There’s an excellent book on Komodo dragons that has an entire chapter devoted to her.)
Kraken died several years ago, but her legacy continues today. There’s several of her descendants still in the AZA, and the intelligence and social needs she demonstrated led to the improvement of life for these guys- and other lizards. The Komodo dragon program has been an eye opener, not just for reptile conservation, but for understanding reptile intelligence and how this incredible clade of animals functions.
reblog if you wear glasses. too many mutuals don't know they have glasses wearers in their midsts
Since I was nine. I won’t wear contacts, as the thought of putting stuff IN MY EYES doesn’t work for me.
Since I was eight. I do wear contacts though, and I stun even my optometrist's office with how casual I am putting and pulling the buggers out.
That's because I learned to do it by feel. I'm too damned blind until they're in.
Challenge accepted
(via)
@fiercebunny
Danny Ramirez
📸 by Erik Ian for Fear Of God
I don't normally rebagle baseball players, but this kid here? He's got a good seat in that saddle and what's more, he's got gentle hands. Loose reins and a conversation going on with his horse.
He's a better rider than most of your Hollywood cowboys, that's for damn sure.