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jorddarb

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Kansas
  • Interests
    Hunting, fishing

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  1. This is a Lafayette. This floor plan has the fridge and stacked w/d on the crane rails rather tha in the slides.

  2. Yes and you are correct unless you are sc for dental issues caused by trauma.
  3. I retired from the Army Feb 18. We are currently enrolled in the West Region our daughter is in east. Most of our routine care we get at the VA. Tricare would be for urgent needs if no VA is near. I can even use the VA for dental, but getting an appointment at our “medical home” in Kansas didn’t fit in with our plans this summer
  4. This whole insurance thing makes my head hurt. I retired in Feb 18. My wife retired in Dec 14. We are both in the VA system with over 50% service connected disabilities. I still pay for Tricare Prime so it will cover my daughter in her last year of school. She ages out in Feb 19. We are full time and I wonder if Tricare select would be a better option for us after my daughter is no longer eligible for prime. As stated above I am a little miffed that we have to pay at all, but all things considered it is cheaper than the civilian health insurance. The new choices of dental and vision are a good thing, but further complicate the whole thing for me.
  5. IMHO It is a personal choice and one must plan for that choice. My bride and I had a plan and were able to retire “early” her 2 yrs ago at 49 and me just this year at 50. If you want to retire early plan for it, if you want to retire when your 62-67 plan for that as well.
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