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12 February 2018 | 13 replies
Mindy Jensen suggested medical tourism.Thanks for readingChinda
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15 December 2022 | 2 replies
That number has increased and so has the number of states supporting medical, recreation, or both.
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4 November 2010 | 23 replies
Because the coil is 1/4 inch or less, the slower the flow, the hotter the water, to the point of an automatic shut off.
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29 May 2008 | 8 replies
If you've ended up in the situation you're in because of a lost job, medical bills, etc., then that's one thing, though you should still be doing everything you can to make good on the situation (i.e. selling the lot and using the proceeds to help you get out of your predicament).If you paid more than you could afford, using a loan that you knew would reset to a payment you wouldn't be able to make in order to try to make money from appreciation, then I have no sympathy for your situation.With that said, if you have a non-recourse loan on the house and the vacant land does not have a deed of trust / mortgage against it, the vacant land is probably safe.
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23 March 2010 | 10 replies
The entire earnest money deposit will be returned to an Owner-OccupantPurchaser who fails to close after the sales contract was signed due to:• There has been a death in the immediate family (contract holder,spouse, or children living in the same household).• There has been a recent serious illness in the immediate family thathas resulted in significant medical expenses or substantial loss ofincome, thus adversely affecting the purchaser’s financial ability toclose the sale.• There has been a loss of employment by one of the primarybreadwinners, or substantial loss of income through no fault of thepurchaser.• In the case of an FHA-insured sale HUD (or a direct endorsementlender using HUD guidelines) determines that the purchaser is not anacceptable borrower.• For other good cause, to be determined by MCB.2.
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8 April 2011 | 60 replies
In the case of Bryan’s question however, it’s more commonly called a “friendly lien†or sometimes a “friendly mortgage†and it can be a legitimate asset protection strategy if done properly.One proper example might be borrowing money from your parents, secured by a deed of trust against your home, for the purpose of buying a car, paying off a school loan, or maybe a medical bill.
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24 August 2018 | 9 replies
Wonderful till they have extensive medical problems in the coming years or their kids get involved .
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1 August 2011 | 5 replies
Ask your banker, physician medical office or anyone who has your personal information - what do THEY do to protect it?
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26 March 2023 | 36 replies
My mom replaced one of her knees last year.She has to sit in hard chairs and for the toilet has one of those plastic toilet seats that sits up high and goes over the toilet.Easy to get up and down and doesn't affect the toilet.You get them from medical supply stores.If they can't fit in one of those then you could install a grab bar bext to the toilet mounted into the stud in the wall so they could use that instead of rocking on the toilet to get up.Usually the leak is not at the wax seal.It is at the bowl to the tank bolts or it can be at the water supply line going into the wall.Sometimes people wrench tighten the line at the wall which is correct but also do that at the point going into the tank.If you wrench instead of hand tighten at the tank you will crack or break the plastic seal and it will slowly leak into a larger leak.Is this toilet on a slab or is it on a plywood floor??
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23 June 2019 | 6 replies
I think the poster is saying the attorney is advising him to get the property out of the guardianship estate to avoid court fees, medical care, etc from eating up all of his assets while he is alive.