I was just looking at the mega millions website.
http://www.megamillions.com/faqs

Can I buy Mega Millions tickets online?

If you are a resident of Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, North
Carolina or North Dakota, you may buy Mega Millions tickets online by
registering with the lotteries of those states. You may also purchase
subscriptions for Mega Millions online in New Hampshire, New York and
Virginia. You must be residents of these states to participate in these
purchase options. Details may be found on those lotteries' websites (see
Where to Play).


What are the payout options?

If you are a Mega Millions jackpot winner, you will have the choice of a
Cash Option or an Annual Payout. Annuity option: Provides for an initial
annual payment followed by 29 annual payments. Each payment is 5 percent
larger than the previous one. Cash option: A one-time, lump-sum payment
that is equal to all the cash in the Mega Millions jackpot prize pool.
Prize claim parameters vary from state to state. Contact your Mega Millions
state lottery for detailed information.


So, 29 years to get your jackpot or take about half the jackpot amount as
cash now.

On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 7:00 PM Lori Michaelson <lorilivin...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Yes, Greg you sure came up with a lot of super ideas but there are so many
> of us who have to pay someone around the clock and then a fill-in every
> time she goes to see her boyfriend which is in the contract but she also
> needs a break. I need a break from quadriplegic problems and I was so
> fortunate to have my husband and my family but now?  I need:
>
> - To be able to stay in my own home where by now I do not even have a home
> but an apartment that is nice but I have no backyard and my view is the
> backyard of a plaza which is extremely noisy. To do this is my caregiver
> moves on I would have to hire someone around the clock and they won at
> least $12 an hour now and usually more. I know many carers who get $20 or
> more an hour to be hired by wealthy families to be a glorified babysitter
> and nothing like the care that we need. Those high-level quads like myself
> anyway.
>
> - To be able to afford my bills and medical bills. I am still writing out
> 20% of what I have to pay with my insurance for that 3 week hospital stay
> and each and every doctor that saw me as well as each and every diagnostic
> test and so much more. I could have done without that!
>
> - To be able to afford a house cleaner because caregivers can't do
> everything.
>
> - To be able to afford the co-pays on my medications. They get quite
> expensive if you do not qualify for Medicaid sources.
>
> - Utilities, food, gasoline and everything that I am paying for now.
>
> - I would love and Environmental Control Unit and a more elaborate smart
> phone and other technologies available in these days for quadriplegics.
>
> - Not have to worry about how soon a power wheelchair representative will
> get to your home for repairs or you are stuck in bed. I would purchase 2
> power wheelchairs that fit my needs as well as wheelchair cushions.
>
> - I agree with Greg with something like an apartment complex or community
> living were several GOOD caregiver that can be TRUSTED with each and every
> one of us.  I am very fortunate to have found a live-in caregiver I have
> now gets my prescriptions, writes out my checks for bills and does all my
> care. A true angel.
>
>  Even right after my husband and I were married we hired someone (1998)
> who we checked out with my cousin who was a local cop and he was supposedly
> "clean" only for him to steal so much from us and neither one of us had
> ever been stolen from before. He got away with silver bars ($$$$) that my
> husband's father had given him along with a huge "large coins" collection
> and jewelry which we could never get back. Not only expensive but
> sentimental. He went to the local pawn shop as quickly as he could to sell
> all this stuff. My husband was at work while he was slowly and sneakily
> getting away with this. We  called the cops and they gave us all kinds of
> excuses. Thankfully insurance covered a lot of things that we had just
> moved into a very nice rental home and let him into our basement to unpack
> dozens and dozens and dozens of boxes from when my husband moved from
> Houston to New York so we have no idea all that he got away with there.
>
> Back in 2007 I actually approached an author who is very familiar with
> quadriplegics, service dogs and such to start such an apartment complex or
> community with individual apartments but he wrote back to me saying that if
> he were younger he might take on such an elaborate idea but he was 60 years
> old and already started a smaller foundation but closer to home and that is
> all him and his wife could do.
>
> There actually is an apartment complex for those people with disabilities
> but if you require the type of care that I do... it would be unaffordable.
> I can't remember the name of it but it is in Pennsylvania. Wait .... I
> think I found it. I actually looked into it when my family wanted me to
> move on and I had nowhere to go but they were not very nice and if you
> wanted to stay in the complex you got nothing bigger than a dorm and only
> got to help every once in a while so it is more conducive to a paraplegic.
> Other individual apartments outside the complex costs $$$$$.
> https://www.regandevelopment.com/new-york-new-jersey-real-estate-developers/inglis-gardens-belmont/
>
> I am sure I can come up with a lot more but need to go lay down.
>
> ~Lori
>
>
> On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 6:17 PM Danny Hearn <ddh...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>
>> Wow, those are good Idea's you came up with Greg. So many of us Quads
>> also can't even afford the disability equipment that we need either.....And
>> Also like Lori said, if we lose our caregivers we can be in a world of
>> trouble. So an apartment for Quads would be a good Idea, perhaps even
>> several locations of them . ( Dan H*** )
>>
>>
>> On Thursday, October 18, 2018 7:59 PM, Greg <g...@eskimo.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> I can't believe the Lotto is at almost a Billion.
>> I assume most of us would donate a lot to something related to SCI.
>>
>> I'd do some to research, but then something for those now living with a
>> SCI. But what?
>>
>> The whole billion can't help everyone. So what do you do. Help lots a
>> little, or help a little a lot?
>>
>> Start a national database of good SCI docs.
>> An apartment just for quads.
>> An Attendant Training School.
>>
>> Grg
>>
>>
>>
>
> --
> "Petting, scratching and cuddling a dog could be soothing to the mind and
> heart and deep meditation and almost as good for the soul as prayer." ~Dean
> Koontz
>

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