OT - Something to consider?

If you're thinking about your future and wondering just how you'll manage for yourself when you're elderly, you might get a smile (and some ideas) from this item that a friend recently sent me:

No Nursing Home for Me.

About 2 years ago my wife and I were on a cruise through the western Mediterranean aboard a Princess liner. At dinner we noticed an elderly lady sitting alone along the rail of the grand stairway in the main dining room. I also noticed that all the staff, ships officers, waiters, busboys, etc., all seemed very familiar with this lady.

I asked our waiter who the lady was, expecting to be told that she owned the line, but he said he only knew that she had been on board for the last four cruises, back to back.

As we left the dining room one evening I caught her eye and stopped to say hello. We chatted and I said, "I understand you've been on this ship for the last four cruises" She replied, "Yes, that's true." I stated, "I don't understand" and she replied, without a pause, "It's cheaper than a nursing home."

So, there will be no nursing home in my future. When I get old and feeble, I am going to get on a Princess Cruise Ship. The average cost for a nursing home is $200 per day. I have checked on reservations at Princess and I can get a long-term discount and senior discount price of $135 per day. That leaves $65 a day for:

  1. Gratuities, which will only be per day.
  2. I will have as many as 10 meals a day if I can waddle to the restaurant, or I can have room service (which means I can have breakfast in bed every day of the week).
  3. Princess has as many as three swimming pools, a workout room, free washers and dryers, and shows every night.
  4. They have free toothpaste and razors, and free soap and shampoo.
  5. They will even treat you like a customer, not a patient. An extra worth of tips will have the entire staff scrambling to help you.
  6. I will get to meet new people every 7 or 14 days.
  7. T.V. broken? Light bulb need changing? Need to have the mattress replaced? No Problem! They will fix everything and apologize for your inconvenience.
  8. Clean sheets and towels every day, and you don't even have to ask for them.
  9. If you fall in the nursing home and break a hip you are on Medicare; if you fall and break a hip on the Princess ship they will upgrade you to a suite for the rest of your life.

Now hold on for the best! Do you want to see South America, the Panama Canal, Tahiti, Australia, New Zealand, Asia, or name where you want to go? Princess will have a ship ready to go. So don't look for me in a nursing home, just call shore to ship.

PS. And don't forget, when you die, they just dump you over the side at no charge.

Reply to
jennellh
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Now that's so great. I'm off to forward it to all of my Old friends. Polly

Reply to
Polly Esther

This sounds like a great idea. I got to spend a couple months in a nursing home this year. I bet princess lines serves a lot better food. :)

Vikki in WA State

Reply to
Vikki In WA State

This is the best idea I've heard of in forever. Only problem is, Medicare will at least pay part of a nursing home bed....

L
Reply to
Batik Freak

Hmm, I know it is a fun article, but medical costs on cruise boats can be crippling (excuse the pun!). A friend of mine had problems and it cost her $5000. Travel and health insurance only pick up so much, and there are many 'exclusions'. Let's just endeavour to stay healthy at home! Cheers Bronnie

Reply to
Bronnie

Strange isn't it Bronnie? DH had problems onboard in Hawaii and he spent time with the doctor who as well as giving him a total checking out, also gave him medication, all for the princely sum of $0. Yep, zero, zilch, nada, nix.

Oh, and it turns out he was allergic to the brand of green tea that they served. This year we're taking our own!!!

Reply to
Sharon Harper

I sit corrected

Reply to
Bronnie

i'm waiting for someone to set up a quilty rest home for quilters in their 'old old fragile, cant do it myself any longer' state. somewhere there is attached to the rest home, a quilty retreat, so they can feel part of the whole quilty world still. get to watch classes, meet other quilters who are still functioning, see all the new fabrics and stuff going on in the quilting world. thats what i'm holding out for anyhow. :) jeanne

Reply to
nzlstar*

LOL - don't be like that!!! Perhaps it's different ships, different docs? Who knows? I'll let you know this year in ......oh about 2 months time!

Reply to
Sharon Harper

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