❄️ Snowflake Abby Brown

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She has to be on disability and Medicaid. Given her age she’s not been able to be on her parents insurance for awhile and there’s no way they could afford all the out of pocket costs of inpatient mental health treatment. Her parents being the trustee for her disability and budgeting out money to her is very likely.

No American, besides the super-wealthy 1%, can afford intensive, ongoing for years, mental health treatment for dependent adult children - esp not inpatient stays. They must apply for SSI and medicaid for their kid, to ensure they can get access to regular treatment and not go bankrupt.
I don’t disagree with you that she could be on Medicaid/SSI, but she could also still technically be on her parents’ insurance until age 26. Many community outpatient commitment programs like the one she seems to be on, with a case manager and a psych nurse who does home visits, are Medicaid-exclusive, but if she has good private insurance they might bankroll something like that too. Private insurance also covers inpatient treatment, and there could be little to no copay if the deductible has been met (and I’m assuming in her case they blew right past it given the amount of treatment she gets).
 
She has to be on disability and Medicaid. Given her age she’s not been able to be on her parents insurance for awhile and there’s no way they could afford all the out of pocket costs of inpatient mental health treatment. Her parents being the trustee for her disability and budgeting out money to her is very likely.

No American, besides the super-wealthy 1%, can afford intensive, ongoing for years, mental health treatment for dependent adult children - esp not inpatient stays. They must apply for SSI and medicaid for their kid, to ensure they can get access to regular treatment and not go bankrupt.

You can stay on your parents' insurance up to 26 yrs old in the US. She probably had/has Medicaid since her first inpatient anyway, but supplemental insurance could have come from her parents until just recently.
 
I know her parents are clearly upper middle class, but are they that well off that they can afford private insurance that covers inpatient stay, a myriad of medications, and mental health facility perks like a case worker and an assigned psych nurse? Maybe before her inpatient stint they would’ve planned to pay for her insurance themselves just to cover some minor therapy and some happy pills, but I have a hard time believing she’s not on Medicaid or some type of disability tugboat now.

Lolcows: funded by taxpayers like you.
 
I know her parents are clearly upper middle class, but are they that well off that they can afford private insurance that covers inpatient stay, a myriad of medications, and mental health facility perks like a case worker and an assigned psych nurse? Maybe before her inpatient stint they would’ve planned to pay for her insurance themselves just to cover some minor therapy and some happy pills, but I have a hard time believing she’s not on Medicaid or some type of disability tugboat now.

Lolcows: funded by taxpayers like you.
She absolutely is. I know wealthy people with top notch “Cadillac” health insurance and they were unable to afford long term, intensive treatment for an adult child after a year or so. Mental health treatment, even after ACA, is limited.

If you are over 18 and have severe mental health issues that require long term intensive treatment, inpatient stays and prevent you from working then medicaid is the only option in the USA.

The SSI tugboat is a piddly little amount compared to the tens of thousands medicaid covers for her mental health treatment. The lowest cost you can find for a inpatient psych stay covered by Medicaid is $1k a day, and that’s your nightmare state funded hellhole they send the people on skid row too. I’ve seen people billed $30-50k for a month in psychiatric hospital.

PL an attorney I worked with had an adult son with schizophrenia and the absolute nightmare he dealt with trying to get him treatment led him to become a well-known advocate in the field of psychiatric care for adult children and the laws regarding them. I learned a lot about the subject from him and the fact only the 1% could afford to pay for private, long term treatment for a severely mentally ill adult child. This attorney was quite wealthy, probably similar to Andy’s parents on the economic ladder if not even higher. Truly medicaid and SSI is necessary and the only option for any adult with chronic, debilitating mental issues to get treatment.
 
Is Abby that far gone that she has no chance of working? She’s dweeby and has had inpatient stays but that seemed like an episode, and the structure seems to have helped her originally.
 
Is Abby that far gone that she has no chance of working? She’s dweeby and has had inpatient stays but that seemed like an episode, and the structure seems to have helped her originally.
I recall a while ago, she had a job at Walmart or somewhere similarly unpicky. I’m pretty sure she got fired after a few days for screeching at people.

Girl doesn’t take direction very well.
 
Is Abby that far gone that she has no chance of working? She’s dweeby and has had inpatient stays but that seemed like an episode, and the structure seems to have helped her originally.
The problem with people with Abby and even low level jobs is difficulty mantaining a schedule and having enough focus and attention span to follow simple procedures. They also tend to have bad tempers, prone to outbursts and seem incapable of doing things “they don’t feel like”

Also, look at her. Abby’s only real interest in life is playing dress up. She really has no intellectual curiosity or low level ambition, she just wants instant gratification.
 
Abby had a job at a supermarket. She claims she got fired for telling someone there to stop texting her because she doesn't want to be friends with them (the messages are in this thread). In reality though we know she is unstable and admits to extremely violent outbursts.
 
The problem with people with Abby and even low level jobs is difficulty mantaining a schedule and having enough focus and attention span to follow simple procedures. They also tend to have bad tempers, prone to outbursts and seem incapable of doing things “they don’t feel like”

Also, look at her. Abby’s only real interest in life is playing dress up. She really has no intellectual curiosity or low level ambition, she just wants instant gratification.
Abby’s problem is she has a tragic combination of mental illness and a horribly enabling home environment. Lower functioning adults with more debilitating mental illnesses are able to live on their own with some level of independence, because they don’t have well off parents that willingly cater to their behavior.
Abby had a job at a supermarket. She claims she got fired for telling someone there to stop texting her because she doesn't want to be friends with them (the messages are in this thread). In reality though we know she is unstable and admits to extremely violent outbursts.
You left out the best part, where she claims to have walked outside to the parking lot and proceeded to take her work shirt off and set it on fire in front of the store. Then she raged on Facebook about someone having recorded her doing it, giving us all childlike hope and excitement for the real live tardage captured on film, but such video never surfaced.
 
She would probably do well with a job. She'd have some structure, and maybe learn a little discipline. The problem is, she'd basically have to have a tard wrangler follow her around and keep her on task, and help her deal with people who aren't Pigman or her parents. I know programs like that exist, but they really focus on helping people with intellectual disabilities. It's kind of weird to think about Abby being less adapt at surviving in the real world than someone with Downs or autism, but she kind of is. Her parents have done the same shit to her that Chris-chans parents did to him... babied and coddled them into near complete helplessness.
 
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Yikes, her legs :c

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Your mind may be 14 years old Abby, but your skin elasticity is not. The older you get, the harder it is for your skin to bounce back from repeated weight gain-loss, leaving you with lumpy, saggy flesh. Don’t let your weight yo-yo so severely if you don’t plan on combating it with some light diet and exercise, otherwise you end up with thighs like that.
 
View attachment 1078441

Yikes, her legs :c

View attachment 1078442

Your mind may be 14 years old Abby, but your skin elasticity is not. The older you get, the harder it is for your skin to bounce back from repeated weight gain-loss, leaving you with lumpy, saggy flesh. Don’t let your weight yo-yo so severely if you don’t plan on combating it with some light diet and exercise, otherwise you end up with thighs like that.

I think that’s just the other side of her shirt actually. Like almost positive. She was pretty chubby for a bit but I don’t recall her ever being so large that she would have that sort of sagging skin.
 
I'm conflicted between saying it's great that those nudes haven't surfaced because she's mentally 12 and back on her shit and wanting to see them because the lulz would be there tbh.
 
This person is in a Facebook group for borderline stalking a mentally ill person and doesn't mind talking about Abby's nudes, which were probably leaked without her consent, but "body shaming" is what she thinks crosses the line
:thinking:
that's some impressive mental gymnastics.
 
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