What is it about a certain voice inflection that forewarns us of that conjunction? A long explanation is given; a reason for “why” a person is about to do something is adroitly conveyed; a detailed and rational discourse is provided; and yet something tells us that the inevitable “but” is about to be inserted, making of the independent clause just spoken merely a precursor for the real reason that the lengthy discourse was given in the first place.
It is also a metaphor for life itself, isn’t it? “Things were just great, and it was the happiest of times, but then…”. It is like the metaphorical dark cloud that dampens the spirit, or the sudden gust of wind that topples the tower when one was just about to reach the apex; the “but” in our lives comes at the most inopportune of times.
Then, there is the causal intervention “but” in law, as in, “But for X, Y would have not been liable because X becomes the primary intervening cause that subverted Y and all other causal determinants.” But for this job, my life would be perfect; but for this minor incident in my otherwise stellar career, I would have been unstoppable; but for X, Y and Z, I would have reached olympian heights; and on and on. Isn’t that what Bing Crosby said of Frank Sinatra (for those who are young enough to even remember such icons of yesteryears, that “But for Sinatra, I would have been the most popular singer of my time”)?
Medical conditions tend to insert that conjunctive into a life, don’t they? For Federal and Postal employees who consider the “but” of a life to be that medical condition that has come to a critical juncture — not merely of a grammatical appendage, but of a true intervening cause that disrupts — because it prevents the Federal or Postal employee from performing one or more of the essential elements of his or her Federal or Postal career, it may be time to begin to prepare, formulate and file an effective Federal Disability Retirement application, to be submitted to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, whether the Federal or Postal employee is under FERS, CSRS or CSRS Offset.
The “buts” of life are merely conjunctives that forecast the darker clouds that rain upon an otherwise stellar experience; to alter the “but” and instead turn it into a mere “and” is what preparing, formulating and filing an effective Federal Disability Retirement application can do, and thereby avert the “but” word that makes the remainder of the paragraph simply an extension of an otherwise joyful phenomena called “life”.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Filed under: Reflections of an OPM Disability Retirement Lawyer | Tagged: air force civilian opm medical retirement attorney, an us postal workers receive disability or workers compensation, army civilian government employee opm medical retirement lawyer, attorney advice for proposed removal of disabled employee from federal employment, atty for long term owcp federal rehabilitation, blog information from fers attorney end of federal employment for disabled us postal workers, choosing workers comp or opm medical retirement benefits, dealing with harassing by federal supervisors after medical condition, depersonalized and indifferent reply on sf 3112d from supervisor federal employment, difficult owcp complaint procedures and retiring on opm medical application federal and postal workers, disabilities bop retirement benefits, disability retirement gs 13 employee, expedite usps disability claim postal attorney, experienced opm medical retirement lawyer, explain what is medical retirement from the federal government and contacting attorney McGill for first time consultation without charge, federal employee running out of sick leave, federal employee with permanent but partial disabilities, federal employees and lack of empathy and compassion with the disabled, fers retirement for stress and depression, filing for early annuity pension for stress claim with fers and csrs attorney, form 2499 usps medical benefits after retirement, guidelines on ca1 form opm form sf 3112c early retirement under workers comp, helping civilian federal government employees from us military bases, how to ask support about medical statement support disability in fers, how to resign from a civilian dod position for medical disabilities, if I am denied postal service accommodation request should I file for early medical out, incapacitated us government employee after off duty injury, lawyers usps disability retirement lawyer, legal postal services for disabled, long term stress leave for federal technician, many postal employees have retired on mental stress but the process can be tricky, medical separate ion from government service even if initiated by agency won’t warrantee eligibility for disability retirement, medically retire from usps with the assistance of top usps disability retirement attorney, mental disabled designation criteria in the usps, nalc disability retirement application requests, navy civilian fers disability retirement lawyer, opm advanced sick leave denial considerations, osteoarthritis retire from post office, owcp or fers disability retirement, power of attorney signature in fers disability attorney contact attorney mcgill first first time consultation is always free, ptsd medical retirement for veteran employees in the postal service, question to attorney McGill: how long do you have to work to qualify for civil service retirement, sleep apnea government disability, sufficiency of the physician’s statement in fers claims, us post office retiring early due to arthritis, us postal service disability retirement lawyer, us postal service shared services private attorney light duty, usps notification of personnel action termination due medical inability to continue employment, when advance sick leave is denied in the usps what can I do next?, when postal inspectors come to my house to bully me into retirement while on owcp what can I do? | Leave a comment »
Federal Disability Retirement Application: Lost…
One’s age can be revealed as to whether, in the privacy of one’s thoughts, the ellipses is replaced with — “Lost in Space”, or even The Swiss Family Robinson. The former is a television series that ran between 1965 and 1968; the latter, a novel by Johann David Wyss published in 1812 that few of us read anymore. Another television series recalled from the dustbin of history’s classics; another novel and writer no longer read, remembered or studied.
They are stories about lost colonies, lost people, lost souls — lost individuals. The fact that they are “lost” is a phenomena that society finds interesting enough to retell the story about which we would never know, except that they were somehow “found” and were able to convey their experiences.
As a child, one remembers the self-contradiction of that very issue: the young, fertile mind queried (and never could get a satisfactory answer from anyone ): How come, if they are really lost, we’re able to watch them on television, or read about them? If they were found, then they aren’t lost, anymore, are they, and if so, why is it interesting or even relevant? Or, is it just of historical interest that we enjoy hearing about the experiences during the time of “being lost”?
The world today, of course, is different from the yesteryears of a bygone era; the world is all “connected”, such that there are no places in the world where we haven’t seen National Geographic photographs depicting of untraveled areas where the “lost peoples” of the universe reside and continue to survive. The Amazonian forests are being depleted through mindless mining and destruction; the Himalayan monks who once medicated in silence wear jeans and sandals while selling trinkets to wandering tourists; and the polar bears that once roamed the northern glaciers wander beneath the pipelines that stretch amidst the wilds once dominated by the wolves that sniffed with suspicion.
Today, we live amidst civilization’s constant drum of progress and technological connectivity; instead of being lost in the wilds of a universe still undiscovered, we remain lost amidst the communities in which we live.
For Federal employees and U.S. Postal workers who suffer from a medical condition such that the medical condition must by necessity lead one to consider filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits under FERS, there is a sense of “loss” and “being lost” in at least 2 ways: The “loss” of a career once held promising; and of being “lost” in the complex, administrative process in preparing, formulating and filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits. In either sense of being lost, it is a good idea to consult with an attorney who specializes in Federal Disability Retirement Law — if only to get a roadmap to help one find one’s bearings.
Being “lost” does not mean simply that one does not know where one is geographically; in fact, most people are lost even in the midst of being surrounded by the daily din of civilization; and that is why consulting with an attorney in preparing, formulating and filing for Federal Disability Retirement is an important aspect in finding one’s way out of the morass of being lost.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Filed under: Fables, Stories and Analogies about CSRS and FERS Medical Retirement Benefits | Tagged: a postal employee may not be on owcp disability compensation indefinitely consult attorney, attorney assistance for injured postal usps employees, atty for long term owcp federal rehabilitation, back pay when qualifying for opm medical retirement, blog information from fers attorney end of federal employment for disabled us postal workers, chances of getting opm disability retirement for depression are higher with professional counseling from experienced attorney, dealing with supervisors negative comments on request for fers disability retirement, degenerative disc disease on postal employee, depression fers medical retirement attorney, disability retirement attorney for federal employee recently removed, documentation needed to show usps disability retirement, early retirement usps employees with medical incapacities, employment after fers disability retirement is possible, federal disability retirement for anxiety, federal employees disability retirement system attorney, federal government supervisor bullying causing depression and anxiety, fers attorney specialized in helping incapacitated usps employees, fers attorney to switch owcp benefits to fers retirements, fers benefits if resign for physical or mental impairments, fers employee how to get medically retired, filing long term disability documents for usps, gad generalized anxiety disorder after dog bit on letter carrier usps, how a fers employee can get medical retirement pension, how long can a us postal worker stay on opm disability before they can retire? until age 62, ice owcp medical retirement benefits lawyer, if I resign post office do they pay my retirement leave, Individual unemployability compensation in federal employment for long term disabilities and injuries, legal board guide from lawyers.com fers disability retirement forum, legal postal services for disabled, light duty requirements federal government and job offer is incompatible with med limitations, long and short term disability documents for usps, long term rehab of usps employees long term, many postal employees have retired on mental stress but the process can be tricky, mdd help with depressive condition in federal employees, opm medical suspension removals, opm retirement if on lwop for employees with long term illnesses or injuries, post office disability retirement benefits, postal employee disability retirement attorney, postal retirement for employee with herniated l5-s1, quacking work before filing for fers disability retirement benefits is not necessary, qualifying for lupus disability eligibility on federal government employees, removal medical inability to perform federal position attorney, resigning from federal service health reasons, stress and abuse of power by federal government supervisor, stress usps fers medical attorney, suspension of disabled employee fers disability lawyer, termination sick leave usps attorney, tunnel carpal syndrome federal employee unable to continue working, urgent lawyer consultation first time free usps employees with disabling conditions, us postal service shared services private attorney light duty, usps medical retirement lawyer federal government employment, usps notification of personnel action termination due medical inability to continue employment, usps off duty status disabilities, usps opm medical incapacity attorney, usps policy on bullying causing mental stress on postal employee, usps work comp medical retirement claims lawyer, va employees who are service connected qualifications for early medical retirement, when you are being surveilled and harassed by postal inspectors while on owcp, working while medically retiring as a fers annuitant is possible but be careful with essential elements of former fed job, yes the usps does have workmans compensation benefits and permanent disability retirement benefits, you don’t need to stop working to apply for federal employee medical retirement | Leave a comment »