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Tag Archives: medicare

A Twinkle at the End

Posted on December 8, 2025 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
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A lifetime of healthcare misadventures, told backwards: ReadA Twinkle at the End now, before I rewind completely.

Most memoirs start with childhood and end with death. Mine does the opposite: I begin as an old guy on the verge of a kitchen mishap, work my way backward through Medicare mix-ups, acupuncture torture, and raisin-based arthritis remedies, until I fade out as a zygote. Think about cradle-to-grave coverage in reverse.

The story moves backward, starting with my healthcare in a Boulder, Colorado, senior cohousing community. Read about my acupuncture torture sessions and the drunken raisin arthritis cure that nearly got me evicted from my condo for being too healthy and young.

Along the way, I recount medical misadventures from my working life, like a small-town hospital merger and an emergency CPR rescue. From there, it’s a rewind through college scrapes, high school drama, adolescent sex-ed horrors, and grade-school struggles with bad eyesight and worse teeth—until I vanish as nothing more than a twinkle in my parents’ eyes.

Of course, there’s a paradox at the heart of all this: healthcare providers want to keep us alive and well, but to survive themselves, they depend on us being just sick enough to keep coming back. Cures don’t pay the bills—chronic conditions do.

According to Social Security, I’ve got about 10.4 years left on my warranty. Given my track record, I might just outlive the actuary—or the actuary might outlive me. Either way, if you want to find out how my story unwinds before I do, grab the book now. Don’t wait until I’m a twinkle. I won’t be signing copies then.

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Posted in BCM Newsletter, Books | Tagged acupuncture, bedpan, benjamin buttons, chiropractor, death, healthcare, medicare, obamacare, orgasm, yoga | Leave a reply

Views from Atop My Bedpan: A Life Told in Reverse: From obituary to orgasm and what I learned about living by almost dying

Posted on June 7, 2024 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
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There’s been a lot of talk over the past year about the state of healthcare in America. I’ve lived through seven, going on eight decades, tangled in the tubes, pills, forms, and fees of the American healthcare industrial complex.

December 16th marks 12 years since I went to the hospital, where I spent a month on my deathbed. That was the inciting incident for my memoir, Views from Atop My Bedpan, which begins with my death — or at least what will likely be my last dance with the Grim Reaper, then travels backward through time. I figured I’d get the pain out of the way first.

Like most people, I didn’t exactly volunteer for this — I was born into it. But I decided to tell my story differently: in reverse. My picture was taken during a brain MRI required for a research study that determined moderate physical activity improves memory.

That way, I could end things with a bang — literally. The final chapter is a twinkle in my parents’ eyes. Life ends in an orgasm. And if we’re lucky, that’s how it began for all of us.

Why tell a story in reverse? Because healthcare, like life, only makes sense when we step back and look at the whole picture, not just the flatlines and the charts, but the absurd, the beautiful, and the deeply human moments in between.

The memoir begins with me in a senior cohousing community in Boulder, Colorado, where I was asked to leave because I was too healthy. Drunken raisins and acupuncture torture worked better than expected.

Go back a bit further, and you’ll find me navigating the politics of hospital mergers and performing emergency CPR in small-town clinics. Keep rewinding, and I’m a college kid learning how not to die too young, a high schooler enduring the horrors of sex ed, and a grade schooler with thick glasses and bad teeth trying to stay out of the nurse’s office.

Eventually, I was nothing more than a cell in my mother’s womb. And finally, I end as a warm burst of joy in a moment between two people who never imagined the healthcare system would one day bill them for my existence.

Click on the book cover to buy an autographed copy of Views from Atop My Bedpan.

Throughout the story, a question hangs in the air: How can a system built to save lives also depend on people never fully recovering?

Our healthcare industry is a paradox. On one hand, it’s filled with people who truly want to help. On the other hand, it’s an industry that needs customers. If everyone were cured tomorrow, the system would collapse under its success.

I don’t claim to have the answers. But I do have stories. Some are funny, some painful, and many are both. If you’ve ever sat on hold with your insurance company, waited six hours in an ER, or wondered whether a treatment was meant for your body or your billing code, this book is for you.

As of this writing, actuarial tables indicate that I have 10.4 more years to live. That’s 10.4 more years of laughing, griping, healing, and learning. I’ve flirted with death about every 20 years — most recently from an exotic lung disease in 2013. Next time, the Grim Reaper might not be so generous. But until then, I’ve got stories to tell and lessons to share.

And here’s one of them: Maybe life shouldn’t be measured by how long we live but by how deeply we’ve paid attention to ourselves, to each other, and to the strange systems we navigate along the way.

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BOT. We learn more and more every day!

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Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter, Books | Tagged affordable care act, aging, bedpan, birth, complex, death, death bed, healthcare, hospital, industrial, medicaid, medicare, obamacare, orgasm, social security | Leave a reply

‘Views from Atop My Bedpan’

Posted on March 19, 2023 by Alan O’Hashi, Whole Brain Thinker
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Views from Atop My Bedpan, a memoir by Alan O’Hashi, is a memoir about the author’s experiences with the American healthcare industrial complex spanning seven decades.

“Views from Atop My Bedpan” is set to release on April 1, 2023. The cover picture is of author Alan O’Hashi as if he had aged 10 years.

During his journey, Alan learned about the Emergency Department bottleneck when he was nearly dead for six weeks. His road to recovery was a long one through alternative treatments. As he grew younger, his contact with the healthcare system was much simpler.

The story moves backward, starting with his healthcare in a Boulder, Colorado, senior cohousing community. Read about his acupuncture torture and drunken raisin arthritis remedy until he was kicked out of his retirement home for being too healthy and young.

The book recounts Alan’s medical-related experiences in the working world, including a small-town hospital merger and an emergency CPR RESCUE.

The story follows his time in college, then traces his life through high school, his adolescent experiences with sex education, and his struggles with poor eyesight and teeth in grade school.

His life ends as a twinkle in his parents’ eyes.

Some content may not be suitable for some readers.

There’s a paradox. Public and private healthcare providers are dedicated to keeping people alive and free from disease, but at the same time, they must also generate a financial profit to sustain themselves.

At the same time, the industry keeps its heart thumping and pumping based on continually expanding the number of patients who consume the latest pharmaceuticals, visit doctors, and are diagnosed by the newest machines. It’s better that people stay a little sick rather than be cured from a profit-and-loss standpoint.

According to the latest Social Security Administration actuary chart, the author has 10.4 years to go. He conjectures his death at 79. He’s had a flirt with death every 20 years or so, most recently surviving an exotic lung disease in 2013.

His next meet-up with the Grim Reaper will likely be the last. Please buy the book now!

“We all have unique experiences as we move through life. Being at the top of my game has been hard work. I prefer to have positive influences on others I meet.” Alan O’Hashi

If you have questions or comments, message the ALAN-BCM BOT. We learn more and more every day!

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Posted in BCM News, BCM Newsletter, Books | Tagged aca, acupuncture, arapaho, boulder, cohousing, colorado, healthcare, medicaid, medicare, obamacare, sex education, wyoming, yoga | Leave a reply

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