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Cookies as Therapy

I’m a fan of The Stranger, Seattle’s alternative news weekly. They do great stuff. I read most of what the Stranger writers have to say through their blog, Slog. Through my recent cookie-mania I was reminded of a piece by Megan Seling that I first became aware of last year, an entire year after it was originally published. It’s still great. It’s called The Long Winter. Her piece tells a familiar (to me, and I’m sure others) story of winter depression and her resolve to bake every cookie in Martha Stewart Holiday Cookies Special Issue. This wasn’t a Julie & Julia stunt, this was real in a way that didn’t have “book deal” written all over it.

Interestingly, she posted that she has recently found a blog (Every Last Cookie) “in which a college sophomore (a “studio art major”) is promising to make all the cookies in Martha Stewart’s Cookies cookbook by the time she graduates.”.

It’s been done, Ms. Seling points out.

I recommend checking out The Long Winter. It’s a piece that still rings true, years later.

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Just Dance

I realized a couple days ago that I’ve been missing out on something that can be helpful during tough days.

Music.

And, thanks to PS 22‘s version of Lady Gaga’s “Just Dance” (seen here,) I was inspired to purchase Lady Gaga’s album, The Fame.

It’s pop. I’m not going to apologize for it. It’s got elements of Christina Aguilera, Britney Spears, the Spice Girls, J-pop and Queen in it. She admits to manufacturing the persona, and she wears it well. Moreover, some of the lyrics of “Just Dance” are ones I can get behind. Can’t see straight when you’re at the club, you love the song that comes on, things are all discombobulated, but what do you do? You just dance. Life sucking the life out of you? Just dance. Gonna be okay.

I’m a sucker for a pop princess. I blame my undying love for Andy Warhol and pop art for that.

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I received my reply from Runner’s World regarding my subscription issue.

Thank you for contacting Runner’s World Magazine customer service. We have removed your name from our Preferred Subscriber list. Your subscription will no longer be automatically renewed. We apologize for any inconvenience this has caused. If you wish to subscribe or renew in the future, you will need to contact us.

Well, that’s a relief. Never knew I was a Preferred Subscriber, nor did I know I would be “automatically renewed.” Now I know. It will apparently take awhile for them to unsub me from all their product listings, but they promise to do so.

It’s a nice magazine to read at the gym, and I like the website for basic info. I don’t need to read it monthly, though, and I’m just not too fond of being overcharged (when I can get it cheaper through Amazon) or being “automatically renewed.”

See previously: Peeve of the Day: Runner’s World

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I subscribed to Runner’s World magazine last year, just a few months after I started a walk-jog program detailed in their Runner’s World Complete Book of Women’s Running. I found both the Runner’s World site and magazine useful at the time, however, my interest waned and by the time they started sending me offers to renew, I decided it wasn’t worth it.

Then came the endless emails from other Rodale properties in my in-box. Figuring they were an upstanding company, I dutifully clicked unsubscribe on the emails.

But the mails kept coming, and each time, less relevant to me than the last.

And imagine my surprise when I received the latest issue of Runner’s World, with my subscription continued to 2010…and then the bill stating:

Dear Laura ****,

We’re puzzled.

We renewed your subscription to RUNNER’S WORLD as requested.

We’ve sent 4 previous reminders.

But as of 09/02/09 our records show that we still have not recieved your payment of $21.94.

Well, Rodale – I’m puzzled, too! You see, I ignored your previous mails because I had no interest in renewing. Yet you sent me new issues anyway, and now a bill for Runner’s World for $9.94 more than if I bought it on Amazon. This, plus the unending spam in my in-box has made me wary to purchase any other Rodale products.

I’ve sent an email to their customer service, and am rather skeptical that I’ll hear back. One Step Ahead has yet to respond to my unsubscribe request, so who knows where this will lead.

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Another NY Times article on the actual costs of health care.

You go to a restaurant, peruse the menu, take your waiter’s suggestions, and order a meal. But there is something odd: the menu has no prices and you have no idea what you will be required to pay until a few weeks later when the bill arrives in the mail.

This is one of the main problems I have with our current system. When I was in the hospital, at some point, probably 30 hours in, I got the feeling that every time a nurse came in and fiddled with something, offered a blanket, a drink, etc. that there was a “cha-ching” at every little moment. Had I been more “with it” I might have asked the cost of the pain killers, and used that to choose whether or not I wanted to take what they had to offer (or call a local pharmacy to see how much getting it called in there and picked up would cost.)

America’s Health Insurance Plans, which represents health insurers, is also trying to draw attention to out-of-network doctors’ fees. Last Tuesday, the group released results of its own survey to show how high such fees can go. It included, for example, a patient in Colorado who was charged $26,000 for gall bladder surgery, compared with Medicare’s fee of $681, and a patient in California who was billed $15,870 for cataract surgery for which Medicare pays $638.

For some, miraculous reason, Medicare is able to pay less than those who are privately insured or not insured at all. This is why our current system is messed up.

Earlier today, I responded to a friend who is against having a system like Canada’s. I said that if it’s a problem to offer government run health care to all, then why is it OK to offer it to the indigent, sick/disabled and old? Why isn’t anyone currently arguing AGAINST Medicare and Medicaid? Why aren’t people shouting that we should dismantle Social Security as well? That’s what I really want to see. If people are going to take their arguments to ridiculous levels/places, might as well take it to the logically ridiculous level.

Kinda like, “Don’t like gay marriage? Then no state-recognized marriage for ANYONE!”

Seriously – if people are so afraid of the government’s involvement in micro-managing their lives, then there’s a lot of things the government should just let go of and get out of.

Or on the other side, maybe us regular folk should be able to benefit from the government’s ability to get the same care for a lower cost. Of course, I’d prefer if the health care industry would just grow a pair and reform themselves without the government stepping in.

But that’s just me.

See previously: The High Cost of Health Care

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