Guess what? I’m a millionaire!
I couldn’t believe it, either, but I got an e-mail telling me all I have to do is call a number and a million dollars will be deposited in my bank account.
I don’t know how these folks got my name. Don’t know the lady who e-mailed me — heck, I can’t even pronounce her name. But boy, will that million dollars come in handy now.
Especially since I don’t have to pay tax on it. Really. That’s what the lady with the long, unpronounceable name said. Since the money is coming from a foreign country and going right into my account, everything will be swell.
Let me tell you, knowing I’m going to be rich is certainly taking a load off my mind. I’ve been playing the lottery regularly — my own self-designed retirement plan — but I’m not doing too well. Matter of fact, my cost to profit ratio is even poorer than the stock market’s and nearly as bad as all those banks that got bailed out.
Yep, that million will be a lifesaver. My go-to-work car has well over 200,000 miles on it. As soon as I get that money, I can replace it with a brand-new car at rock-bottom prices.
My sectional’s looking a little sad, too, thanks to years of kids and the cat’s inclination to use it as a launch pad. I’ve been longing for a bathroom re-do, too. Not that my baby blue tub and 20-year-old linoleum aren’t enchanting, mind you, but I’m ready for a change.
For years, my family’s played that “when I win the lottery game,” so I already know what everyone wants.
The adventure will start with a trip to Vegas, followed by a rail tour of Alaska. My mom’s getting a new kitchen, and my sister gets new appliances all through the house.
A few necessities will go to the kids and grandkids, but I believe I’ll also drop some bucks on them and let them go wild at the flea market and dirt bike dealership.
I happened to mention this wonderful opportunity to a loved one, who frowned and shook her head. She sat me down and explained it was a scam — that once the lady with that long name got my bank account information, my own funds would disappear.
I appreciate the concern, because I know rip-offs like that happen all the time. Yet I’m really tempted to take the risk.
After all, if some scammer is desperate enough to go after the $11.27 in my savings account, I believe they may need it worse than I do.
Columns
CATHIE SHAFFER: Great news in hard times
- Columns
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Mark Maynard: Charles will be in charge: 2/9/12
It was at least mildly interesting a couple of weeks ago when the deadline for filing for local elected offices came and went without much fanfare.
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John Cannon: After passion, love still grows: 2/8/12
While a naive student at Morehead State University more than 40 years ago, my then girlfriend made me an offer I could not refuse. It was only later that I learned I should have refused it.
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Cathie Shaffer: All that’s old is new again: 02/07/12
Every night before I go to bed, I click on my electric blanket. There’s nothing I like better on a cold — OK, lately, it’s been coolish — night than a nice, warm bed.
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Tim Preston: Art downtown, ‘hippie’ soap, Valentine’s and living-dead machines: 02/05/12
I’m not certain this is anything that could be classified as a trend, although I have noticed something in downtown Ashland I am compelled to encourage.
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Freeways to freedom
Last week, while driving to South Shore, I glanced at the dealer placard on the car ahead of me on the Jesse Stuart Bridge.
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Lee Ward: 02/05/2012 — Dieting is a man's world
A male coworker is dieting, apparently for the first time.
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Katie Brandenburg: Finding a time machine: 2/3/12
My grandmother once told me a story about a boy she grew up with who built a time machine in his family’s shed.
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John Cannon: Not a chore but a true labor of love: 2/1/12
It was a slow and tedious task, but it was anything but work.
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Cathie Shaffer: A whiff of the past: 1/31/12
It occurred to me, as I listened to a conversation about today’s home medical treatments versus yesterday’s, that one big factor is the smell.
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TIM PRESTON: Downtown scenes, Valentine’s dinner, bacon and running
Tim Preston's weekly business column for Jan. 29.
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Mark Maynard: Charles will be in charge: 2/9/12








