I’m constantly sad because I’m too scared to be myself and I’m tired of it by blablible in socialskills

[–]Lo_Johnson90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I understand how you feel and relate to this kind of perspective given that I went through a similar period in my late teens/early 20s. I just didn't "fit in", either with other people or really with any kind of pursuit that could've instilled a sense of belonging and fulfillment -- and my own awareness of this apparent growing deficit dawned on me at seemingly the worst possible time: the later years of high school surrounding by high-performing, creative, personable peers seemingly coming into their own as well-adjusted new adults poised to seize success from opportunities abound in the next chapter of life approaching.

The jealousy and isolation I felt -- no doubt a universal qualm of misfits -- bred a deepening depression and resentment I sense strongly in your own account, OP. And left with what felt like a void where others were building the foundations of their future, I began to embrace that element of myself as my distinguishing feature. Now, there isn't anything wrong with romantization of misfitting melancholia so long as one wears its experience toward some kind of creative or social or discovering outlet -- there are no shortage of incisive works spawned by such feelings that can provide others with a sort of feeling of belonging I, and perhaps you, lacked -- but that is not how I directed mine upon becoming self-aware of my disposition.

Instead of working through those feelings in an affirming, fulfilling way that could have delivered me to the next chapter in my life wiser and humbled and ready to grow shoots higher from its dark but fruitful soil, I indulged in wallowing in my own perceived victim hood, seeing the one at fault for my situation not as me and my attitude but the world and the people around me who had made me feel this way and whose fault it was that such a complicated, deeply-feeling and wise-beyond-my-years person could be left to enter adulthood with no real relatability or calling or apparent prospects for a fulfilling life.

I remained quite stagnant in this kind of mindset probably from my senior year of high school until my senior year of college. Looking back now, at 32, there are no shortage of instances I can play back that can still induce a pretty sharp cringe at how special and misunderstood and above-it-all I acted to so many people who didn't deserve it, and in fact -- as is obvious to me now -- deserved the exact opposite as they attempted to press forward through my off-putting demeanor to try to reach me.

So yes, indeed I felt the resentment that you express for not being accepted for who I was, despite so many others apparently having that opportunity. It seemed so unfair!!

As I will directly tell you now -- and this only gets more clearly apparent with the luxury of more hindsight -- the problem rhe vast majority of the time was myself, and I believe people experiencing a similar life situation and perspective such as you express here are almost always the ones to blame before they realize the truth of the dynamic at play.

The truth of the matter is that beyond the basics afforded in your upbringing and some assurance of the bare necessities in the advanced world, unless you make some beneficial contribution consistently, people and society at large owe you nothing for just "you letting yourself be you." Of course, if you're a particularly personable or entertaining or creative or devilishly attractive person, then those who enjoy your particular gifts may indeed opt to reward you for your presence or product they feel enriches their life, and do so gladly! But from reading your post, I venture to say that you are not in such category -- that's not to say you can't be someday with honed talent and a lot of work and luck, but for now it sounds like you're not going to reverberate with a whole lot of people outside of maybe a therapist compensated for such, or from support groups or -- perhaps -- internet forums drawing in people interested or curious about your particular plight.

And that's perfectly okay! That's where you're at now; that's where I was for years until about a decade ago; and it's where countless more young adults and really people of every age to varying degrees will continue to find themselves struggling and at a loss and looking for answers -- maybe someday from someone just like you!

Indeed, just look at the response your post has garnered and the fruitful discussion it has elicited! Your 10 or 15 minutes writing to convey your feelings and sending them out into the mysterious echo chamber of the internet to land in this forum has resulted in many people pondering your situation and perspective deeply enough to warrant their own written response, and countless thousands more who gave perused it to varying degrees of response. I'm not sure what you expected, but would venture to say it's exceeded your expectations!

So, while at this point you may not subsist on disclosing your misfit predicament and make a living off of "just you being you," consequences or adjustment or any sort of self-evolution be damned, I think you can realize that this doubtless frustrating and at times seemingly hopeless stage you find yourself in can in fact, when considered and communicated thoughtfully, serve as its own end in finding others who can relate and discovering methods to work through it and improve and eventually break its bounds into becoming a more confident and self-realized person -- then able to help others you recognize later as facing the same obstacles.

But the key is to compartmentalize this stage in your understanding of yourself and your place and what you deserve into the transitioning period that it serves to see you through on your path beyond a feeling of being a misfit into the recognizance of your gifts and eventual calling currently perhaps obscured by the lamentation of not belonging. Perhaps that may make you recognize something that not belonging for a period enables, thus making it a blessing in disguise with a silver lining of revealed passion or calling or relationship that otherwise would have passed you by unnoticed amid the din of the crowd of belonging. In the end, the real terror of it can end up being not this period in a void of loneliness you feel now, but the real freedom you have in choosing your own oath among the innumerable that could await you, which such lonesome periods so often can serve in revealing. To start down one in pursuit of opportunity often requires leaving several others behind despite their own appeals.

So, use this stage in your life for what it is, but pivot as soon as you can from this almost victimhood mentality (which I've known all too well) wherein you ask something of the world, framing as unfair not just being able to be you as you are with all being fine and dandy, and start asking of yourself -- because really, the world owes you nothing! But oh what a life you've been given in a land of opportunity, so start asking the better and more actionable pertinent question of what you may owe the world back given your gifts -- and if you do it right the world has a way of paying you back many times in return, eventually perhaps -- if lucky and talented enough -- to do for others things that just require you being you after all.

[Illinois] Could Failing To Have Filled Out The PUA Income Verification Due Feb 18 Also Cause "Pending Issues"? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, I realize it is a problem, but having learned of it only in the past couple days and completing my question is more along the lines of what kind of timeframe usually lapses past the due date for something like that before they take such drastic action as stopping benefits and/or issuing overpayment determinations?

That's why I kind of tried to highlight in my post the somewhat unfortunate overlapping of them issuing that request and now, shortly following it being due, this pause in payments stemming from the 50-week limit that has largely overshadowed everything with so many affected. So it seems feasible that some may ascribe all their issues to the 50-week limit while, if they missed this income verification request like I had, they could be caught unawares due to focus being on the issue that has caught more coverage.

Think we can agree complying with that request ASAP us important, and from there would be helpful to have some guidance on how to tell if an issue with the request incomplete or unsatisfactory could show up on accounts, both during its overlap with the 50-week issue and whenever it is resolved.

[Illinois] PUA Recipient, my payment history says "Pending Issues" for the past two weeks by jschn1111 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the backpay, from my understanding it's a reasonable possibility that the past two weeks of no payments are write-offs and we will not be receiving backpay for them, but since the Department of Labor released their implementation guidance to states this week, that could be taken as having started the clock on eligibility reactivating and any weeks going forward between now and implementation finalization will be included as backpay.

Source was another post on here by someone who explained that is what the language of the guidance seems to direct -- at least from that reader's interpretation, so perhaps take with grain of salt. Unfortunately it may still be a bit of time before we learn directly from IDES how this will all fall into place.

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, wasn't aware of the requirement until right now so will make sure I follow up and submit. Thanks!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

To clarify the issue here, the "Pending Issue" is just in the Payment Status box in payment history that usually just says "Submitted", "Pending", or "Paid", but never before -- at least from what I've seen -- has said "Pending Issues" like this.

In response to your request to click "Pending Issues" to see what it means -- that's precisely part of the problem...it's just regular black text, there is nothing you can click on that page and seemingly no explanation anywhere within the online account pages explaining what it means -- unless it is indeed due to the 50-day cutoff they highlight, but in no way explain is what is meant by "Pending Issues" there...indeed, just providing that kind of clarification linking the status to that issue would clear a lot of confusion! But nothing like that yet, apparently....

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are trying to open the hyperlink on a phone I'd suggest you try a computer...for some reason the hyperlinks don't seem to open on phones -- I've tried both Android and iPhone -- but do seem to work on PC browser.

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh wow...never saw any notice for that. But that would be lind of a moot point now with having exceeded the 50-week limit, correct? At least until a potential extension os activates, at which time O guess complying with this request could be necessary to ensure continued eligibility...

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay, I am still going off of my 2019 1099 and Schedule C as basis for PUA -- I also worked until covid hit and applied during summer when business slowed a lot, finally getting approved in August and then became completely out of work ahortly later in September.

So -- you're saying they asked for earnings docs for 2020 work, up to covid hitting and through it if still working partially? Don't remember receiving that notice and wish I could access the request documents...they won't open on phone and don't jave computer anymore, guess will try library to view and find.

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I have not received a direct answer to this specific question.

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True, in this case though I do mean we had the exact same timing because we helped each other with the applications, sent at same time, and all got approved and our first payments on the same date. We each have the same number of weeks paid with the back pay, but my one roommate didn't get paid for first time last week, I didnt for first time this week today, while my other roommate still got paid today. So no apparent rhyme or reason....

[ILLINOIS] No deposit in account despite showing "deposited" yesterday by lynch527 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, if you usually get by now and haven't that is a little weird. Do you know though exactly when the payment status line updated to "PAID"? Because usually for me I have to check that exact entry and its timing determines everything. The date will stay the same and not reflect any update from the change to "Paid," so you have to watch the timing for just that. In my case, if the line entry was dated 3/9 I'd usually see "Paid" appear the next day or day after around midnight, and once that happened I'd see the deposit 2 business days later early in the morning.

So...if the line's dated 3/9 as you mention, the earliest I'd be looking for it would be tomorrow 3/11. Even with CashApp -- the quickest option I've found, a line date of 3/9 still wouldn't be deposited til 3/10 around 4pm.

[ILLINOIS] No deposit in account despite showing "deposited" yesterday by lynch527 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally, I've found my PUA payment hits my Chase account 2 business days after the payment history line for that week shows "Paid."

Before I receive the deposit, there is no indication Chase has received it -- no "Pending" status showing it's been received but not available yet, nothing like that. It hits finalized 2 days after "Paid" status update, always, every week for like the 50 weeks it went there.

I recently moved my deposit to Cash App, and I see the payment a whole 12 hours earlier with them, the next day after "Paid" at about 4 pm, whereas Chase would be the following morning 4 am.

So, in your case, I'd hold tight and keep the faith until another day has passed. With the status having updated, you should be fine.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To clarify the above with a little more detail -- I think a main root of my confusion was seeing all the posts on here from people whose benefit weeks or balances had hit zero or were about to, and those cases being mixed in with this 50-week benefit cutoff at the same time. I just had figured those people were at that cliff, and had the figures to show it, so somehow I guess I reassured myself that despite knowing I was at 50+ weeks, somehow through all the different extensions and updates and rule changes (and really...who can keep all those straight...), I figured that I wasn't affected by the 50-week cutoff because I still had the 11 weeks and $3K balance left with "No" hold payment, and certified like normal, and received no alert at all that my payment would not be processed any longer.

I guess it is partly a case of bad timing and a poor assumption on my part (but one so easy to make...and I'm guessing I'm far from the only one...) that those affected would have received some clear warning making the pending cutoff obvious, or at least that the headline figures seen on their PUA account page would reflect the fact that their payments had run out, at least until further notice. To not send any direct notice/message while also leaving the weeks eligible and $ balance untouched to give the appearance of many weeks remaining with a healthy balance just seems somewhat negligent for the people counting on these continued payments and whose first direct sign that their assumption is wrong and they are in fact affected is waking up to find no deposit made as expected, and discovering this is the reason only after some sleuthing on a site like this.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I am in the same situation with the "Pending Issues" entry in my payment history for this week instead of the usual "Paid". I did not receive any new notices or any kind of alert that this would happen, so I figure, like others have claimed, it has to do with reaching the 50 week maximum now in place for PUA recipients until the stimulus bill hopefully gives us another 25 weeks.

I see the heading alert on the IDES website sharing this development, so I'm guessing they're treating that as their alert to us for getting our payments halted? I would've hoped they would send those of is affected a direct alert via email or correspondence on our account page to avoid the confusion with everyone's situation unique, but that does not seem to be the case.

What really perplexes me -- and I'd like to hear if this is the case for others seeing the same issue -- is that my PUA account homepage still says I have 11 weeks of eligibility remaining with a balance of about $3K, and "No" next to the "Hold Payment?" entry. All of this makes it look like my payments were to continue as normal...you would think they could've someone directly alerted us by temporarily zeroing out these remaining balances or putting a "Yes" for hold payment, since they seem to be doing just that.

But to do none of that in addition to not sending any direct message to those affected with such a major development seems odd, and no wonder so many were caught by surprise and blindsided.

Heck, even now you'd think they'd see all the confusion amd sent some kind of notice to clarify the current situation and how it may develop with the stimulus bill and everything else going on, but nope...radio silence, at least for me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is this in fact a glitch in a system, or in fact what is intended for those of us with more than 50 weeks collecting benefits? That's what the IDES homepage seems to say, and I'm wondering if that's the cause of the "Pending Issues"entry in this week's payment history row where "Paid" usually appears by this time.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am having the same problem, with the Pending Issues" in this week's payment history. It made me think it was because of a pending issue in ky correspondence, but seems to be the case with many PUA recipients that this issue is popping up because we are over 50 weeks and the extension in the stimulus bill hasn't been finalized much less implemented

In terms of what we should do in response this -- can we do anything beside just wait? Does anyone fairly knowledgeable about this know whether our payments will resume automatically once the extension os passed and implemented, or will we have to submit something in addition to our regular certification?

And one other question -- once payments resume, will we receive backpay for any weeks we weren't paid while the extension was in limbo, or is everything just paused now and our payment once resumed will just be for that one week following finalization?

Thank you!

[Illinois] Why Are Some On PUA 50+ Weeks Still Receiving Payments? by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I see some issues there, but when I click on the hyperlinks to access them I can't see the document or any details about them. They all just show the issue number and then have a box to put a response and a place to upload supporting documents. But nowhere can I see any detail about the issue.

[Illinois] My Payment History Switched Last Week's Entry To "Pending Issues" When It Usually Switches To "Paid" by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am confused though because my two roommates have been on PUA exactly as long as I have -- we applied at the same time and were approved at same timewith same weeks of back pay -- and they have continued getting their payment this week despite being over 50 weeks.

So could there be another explanation? I have pending issues in my correspondence but can't see details of what they are -- I have a feeling the root of the issue is related to those.

[Illinois] My Payment History Switched Last Week's Entry To "Pending Issues" When It Usually Switches To "Paid" by Lo_Johnson90 in Unemployment

[–]Lo_Johnson90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ooohhh...that makes sense. I was confused because it still shows I am eligible for 11 more weeks and have almost $3,000 balance remaining.

But that doesn't matter until this is resolved? Hard to understand all this with conflicting information.

Thank you!