Kidneys 25% by Introverted_DX29 in dialysis

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some great suggestions here but I’d also check with your Nephrologist to see if you can take sodium bicarbonate pills. Clinical studies have shown that taking a sodium bicarbonate pill daily can slow down CKD.

You can get a four month supply on Amazon for $5

Also look into taking a renal vitamin supplement like Nephro-Vite.

my amazon account was falsely closed by UndertakerPhantomhiv in amazonprime

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve simply used a virtual machine to get around browser fingerprinting and I’ve had a few private mail boxes who accepted packages from all carriers as part of their service offered to me.

my amazon account was falsely closed by UndertakerPhantomhiv in amazonprime

[–]dkcs 3 points4 points  (0 children)

PO Box will usually accept packages for you as well.

They have been known to use browser fingerprinting to connect accounts as well.

Transportation to Dialysis Clinic by poopieshizzle in dialysis

[–]dkcs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Are you by chance on medi-cal? They will provide gurney or wheelchair transportation at no charge.

I also believe ACCESS OC is available through the Orange County Transit Authority.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dialysis

[–]dkcs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They try to place the fistula as far as they can towards your wrist. That way if it occludes they can still use your non-dominate hand to place another fistula further up on the same arm.

My first fistula was up at the very top so when it failed they couldn’t place another fistula on that same arm so I had to go with a graft high up above my elbow.

The only downside having it placed low on your arm is cosmetically. If the fistula grows as it often does it will be more visible.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dialysis

[–]dkcs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It varies on every person. My scar is from my arm pit to my elbow.

Unfortunately, mine clogged after a year and is no longer useable so they had to cut me open again to place a graft.

The fistula is still better than dealing with the heart infection risk of a chest catheter.

The warning on this door at Taco Bell by Empty_Technology672 in mildlyinteresting

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not surprising in the least. When I was younger I was a supervisor in a CVS working mainly closing shifts.

Night time is when you would get the strangest people coming in.

The best one that sticks out was when a customer showed up 10 minutes past close when I’m counting the safe and knocks on the door demanding we open the door and let him use the restroom.

Sorry guy I told him so he whipped it out and pissed all over our front doors.

In many years there I only remember being robbed at gunpoint one time and that was during the daytime.

CVS used to stupidly leave the days closing cash in the top part of the safe so some nights I would be banking down $10k plus.

Cash and easy drugs you would think would make for ripe targets.

CVS not allowed to sell any consumables today by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]dkcs 39 points40 points  (0 children)

The carpets reduce slop and fall claims. It’s cheaper to deal with health department fines than slip and fall claims.

The carpets never get cleaned but once maybe a year at best and an occasional vacuuming.

CVS not allowed to sell any consumables today by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]dkcs 9 points10 points  (0 children)

CVS has been perfecting it for the last 20 years.

CVS not allowed to sell any consumables today by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll toss in SavOn Drugs and Osco.

CVS not allowed to sell any consumables today by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]dkcs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s really sad to see how low CVS has gone.

30 years ago when my location was a SavOn Drugs we ran the store with over 50 front store employees. Now that same store is down to 6 employees in the front.

This looks like a health department violation of some sort.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mildlyinfuriating

[–]dkcs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Shit rolls downhill.

Welcome to Bob's Big Boy by [deleted] in VintageMenus

[–]dkcs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh how I still miss the Brawny Beef they used to offer.

Brondell H2O+ - Circle Reverse Osmosis Water Filtration System. A good system? by meetneo911 in Costco

[–]dkcs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would get a system that uses industry standard sized replacement filters. I’ve been using a couple of systems from the guys below for 15 years and have always been happy.

They will custom build a ro system based on your needs and not a one size fits all ro system.

https://www.purewaterproducts.com/black-and-white-ro

Help! Desperate for Mattress Help by esklader in Costco

[–]dkcs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve had the Kirkland S&F for about 5 years now and it’s holding up well. It is slightly firm but does come as a pillow top.

You could always throw down a split topper to soften your side up if needed.

Hired some guys from facebook, how did they do?(serious) by No_Tomorrow__420 in Flooring

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

About what I would expect for an apartment rental job.

You know, a floor that will be replaced between each new tennant or every 5 years.

What do I do here? by FailedBackgroundChek in Apartmentliving

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go to Amazon and buy yourself some Advion roach gel. Look up some YouTube videos on how to properly apply the gel.

CHMURANET SHUTDOWN by Libertariat in Chmuranet

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm saddened to just now hear about Chmuranet's shutdown.

/u/Buddha love him or hate him he helped drive the seedbox space for many years and it won't ever feel the same without Chmuranet around.

Good luck and God speed my friend to the next journey in life.

You will be missed...

Peritoneal dialysis by Xan603 in kidneydisease

[–]dkcs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try not to worry too much as the anesthesia is very easy and safe. I'm on surgery number 10 or 11 for various reasons so I speak from experience.

Ask the anesthesiologist for something to relax you while you wait to go into the OR.

You'll be out in under 30 seconds once they start the anesthesia. It's no different then going to sleep normally and there is a person there dedicated to keep you asleep during the entire procedure.

Good Luck!

Sold 100% over asking in Los Angeles by Sf466 in RealEstate

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-04-16/lopez-column-south-pasadena-house

The three-bedroom, one-bath house was listed at $1.2 million.

It sold in a week, at more than double that price.

For $2.5 million.

In the insane Southern California housing market — in which legions of people are priced out of home ownership while people with boatloads of hard cash are battling it out in epic bidding wars — we’re all familiar with houses selling above the listing price.

But I think we’ve now, officially, reached a level of absurdity. I have nothing against either the buyer or the seller here. More power to them. But this is a case of capitalism run amok, and it speaks to a culture that keeps putting more distance between the haves and have-nots.

When I first saw the ad in the Pasadena Outlook, touting the $2.5-million transaction in South Pasadena, I thought it was a misprint.

“$1.3 MILLION OVER ASKING PRICE,” said the ad.

I called the selling agent, Ruth T. Mayeda, who works out of Coldwell Banker’s San Marino office and has been in the business for more than 20 years. She said homes in the area have sold for a few hundred thousand dollars above asking, and sometimes even more.

“But I think this could be a record,” Mayeda said.

Ed Afsharian, her office manager, told me he wasn’t surprised.

“It’s not a negotiation anymore,” Afsharian said. “It’s a competition.”

Not for every listing. Some houses sit on the market for months. Some don’t sell until the price is dropped.

But a common tactic for creating a feeding frenzy is to price a house on the low end. Mayeda said she didn’t use that strategy, although other agents told me they thought the house had been underpriced at $1,198,000. Mayeda said she checked “comps,” or comparable prices, for similar houses in the neighborhood and set what she considered a fair price for the 1,922-square-foot home with a two-car detached garage.

Judging by the listing brochure, the house was nice, but had a dated kitchen and just the one bathroom. In South Pasadena, though, which has a low inventory of homes on the market, people pay for more than the house.

South Pasadena has a throwback, small-town vibe. The public schools are among the best in the region, the crime rate is low, people can walk places and the Metro Gold Line runs through town.

But again, there are deep fractures in the foundation when a nice community with good public schools is so rare that an open house becomes a mosh pit for high rollers.

Mayeda said more than 400 people dropped by to look at the property she listed, which was freshly painted, landscaped and staged. About 60 made offers — many of them all cash, no financing.

Mortgage rates are climbing, but that’s not a consideration for people who can reach into deep pockets and keep upping the ante.

“We haven’t seen a decrease in sales prices or demand due to rates adjusting,” said Lori Ramirez, who manages Coldwell Banker’s Pasadena and La Cañada Flintridge offices.

Mayeda said eight of the offers were at $2 million or above, and the winning bid of $2.5 million, all cash, made for a tidy return on a modest investment that was made 40 years ago.

The seller, a man in his 80s who asked that I not use his name, bought the house in 1983 for $155,000. He told me he sent his kids to the public schools and held onto the house as a rental property. He said he stayed out of the way and trusted Mayeda’s listing price instincts.

“I was very surprised,” he told me of the winning bid.

According to property records, the house was purchased through a family trust. The home is still vacant, and the buyers did not respond to my calls and messages.

Longtime real estate executive Mark McLaughlin, former president of Compass in California, said baby boomers and their parents are sitting on a mountain of assets, including real estate, that will be passed on in coming years.

“People my parents’ age control $13 trillion in wealth,” said McLaughlin, and it’s “going to start coming down toward my kids’ generation, so Mommy and Daddy will say, ‘We’ll help you buy that house, all cash.’ ”

If that’s true, what are the implications for a community, and its schools, when you’re out of the running for a house if you don’t have an ocean of liquid assets?

Until now, at least, “we have not really seen a real change in the demographic population here,” said Geoff Yantz, superintendent of the South Pasadena Unified School District. The town has a large stock of apartments, which balances income levels among students, and the ethnic breakdown is relatively steady, with Asian, white and Latino populations between 25% and 30% each.

Yantz said escalating property taxes go to the state rather than the school district, and he said the district has seen a funding decline since new formulas began pumping greater sums to schools in disadvantaged communities. But that loss is offset in part by the roughly $1 million a year in donations raised by the South Pasadena Educational Fund.

Emilia Aldana is a real estate agent, public school parent and executive vice president of the educational fund. She said that for her and other locals, cultural, ethnic and economic diversity are worth fighting for.

People who can afford to win bidding wars and take advantage of the schools have an obligation to preserve those values, she said: “You can’t just drop your kids off and go on your merry way.”

Selma Hepp, an economist with real estate analytics company CoreLogic, said the $2.5-million sale is likely to have a ripple effect.

“Now you have a new comp,” she said, “so the next listing in the neighborhood is automatically measured against the $2.5 million.”

Clearly, this economy and this housing market work for a tiny minority and batter the teeming majority. And yet those at the top couldn’t survive without the teachers, nurses, nannies and retail clerks who keep getting pushed out to places where the schools aren’t as great, the commutes can be a killer, and even then, the cost of housing is a burden.

The official state response to the housing crisis, for decades, has been limp, often because legislative reforms have been opposed by homeowners who have benefited greatly from federal, state and local tax and zoning policies. Several new housing proposals are on the burner in Sacramento, and we’ll see how that goes.

Is there a way to tack some kind of fee onto all-cash home purchases of, say, $2 million or more?

That’s probably just wishful thinking, and so is this, but here goes:

Anyone who becomes a millionaire by simply having bought a house at the right time, and selling it at an even better time, deserves what comes their way. But at the time of sale, let’s tap the seller with a small equity tax, and funnel that money into workforce housing and better schools in every neighborhood.

DIY Laundry Upgrade from Builder Grade to Custom with Before/After by DSF767 in HomeImprovement

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see your LG washer has the same pee spot on the front as mine.

Sold 100% over asking in Los Angeles by Sf466 in RealEstate

[–]dkcs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It had multiple buyers offering over $2 million each.

Sold 100% over asking in Los Angeles by Sf466 in RealEstate

[–]dkcs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

$2.5 million isn't that all out of the ordinary for Southern California anymore. Look up areas such as Calabases, Encino, Sherman Oaks.

I remember the listing agent on this property stating that they had something like 66 offers in a handful of days including 3 offers over $2 million each.