AngelL wrote:
I live alone in Seattle, Washington in the United States. I began receiving Social Security Disability (SSDI) of $956/month in 2019. I applied for disability seven years earlier, in 2012, after my doctor told me to stop working for health reasons. Between 2012 and 2019, I lived on state disability of $142/month (which ended when I was approved for SSDI). Why did it take so long to be approved? Perhaps I didn't have enough wrong with me...
Coronary heart disease - six heart attacks
Chronic kidney disease stage 3a
Myasthenia Gravis - muscular auto-immune disorder (no treatment/cure)
Chronic pain - prescribed 40 mg opiates/daily
COPD
Neuropathy
Autism level 2
Dissociative Identity Disorder (aka multiple personality disorder)
complex PTSD
combat PTSD
Major depressive disorder
Panic disorder
Just the fact that most employers wouldn't allow me to come to work on opiates every day should have been enough imo but I was denied seven times prior to being approved. (three denials and an appeal followed by starting over and two more denials prior to acceptance)
I didn't apply for disability benefits until I was in my late twenties because I was too brain damaged to do so & my parents were both disdainful of 'benefits' and didn't help me apply before then. I couldn't even afford anything more than maybe £30 a week in shopping at one point? I was as thin as a rake, legit' starving with a bunch of health conditions, maybe 6 or so (conditions).
Before that I had a 2 & a half years of deep depression from 2009 until 2012, and then went head long into another disaster, like a pong ball being batted along a series of nightmarish obstacles.
My life has been a series of unrelenting disasters of disproportionate scale.
Then you get people telling you that you are entitled because you have white skin.
Both of my parents lived in the worst, underclass areas of what was back when I was a kid, a depleted & hellish city. Neither finished high school.
I am now doing an MSc.
Yes, the odds are stacked a zillion to one against you with a bunch of health conditions, but even a bit of success can be achieved in many areas.