need help filing for social security disability?
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a practical guide to social security benefits it’s a well known fact that the social security administration denies almost 70% of the initial applications for disability per year
but did you know you can win social security disability benefits on your first try i did applying for disability is like playing a game of chess with a blindfold on your opponent can see everything and has a strategy. While you, on the other hand, are completely blind and most likely are assuming your opponent is playing the same game as you. Not true <p
i too, had to deal with all of these issues, and i got social security disability on the very first try i was awarded my benefits only 6 months after applying
you don’t have to be powerless during the process. You can cut through the bureaucracy how did i do it? we came up with a system to maneuver my case through social security and we have duplicated that system so you too can get social security disability on your first try
how do i know all the tricks of the trade? because i personally applied and won social security disability benefits the first time i applied
listen to michelle toole’s, author of “a practical guide to social security disability benefits” interview with brian therrian of the disability digest, a true, real life success story about winning and coping with disability "learn how michelle toole won disability in just 6 months , and copes with chronic illness " 3 part interview with michelle toole is below <p
part 2 how michelle won her disability benefits in just 6 months part 3 how michelle built a thriving web site that supplements her income and 5 tips to help you cope with a chronic illness.<p
why did i write this book? when i first became sick with an undiagnosed illness, i thought it would be a short-term issue that i could handle. But, as time went on and i got sicker and sicker, i began to feel like my whole world had ended and that i would never be healthy again. It took a while before i actually accepted that i had become disabled. Disability is a hard word to own.
one of the hardest things i had to do was to accept that i was indeed disabled and that i could no longer work. To have to give up a job that i loved wasn’t easy. Once i came to the conclusion that i needed financial help, it was up to my advocates, my parents, to help me through the bureaucratic process. I just did not have the energy and the mental ability to sift through all the paperwork and deal with the system.
it took the support of my advocates and of my entire immediate family for me to survive both emotionally and physically. Dealing with the medical community was in itself a nightmare that i could not effectively handle. There were countless misdiagnosis, dangerous side effects to medications, endless appointments to keep and reams of paperwork to compile.
at that point, we were all blind to the system. We did not know where to turn for help, …read more detail
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