u/lolomgsup

Image 1 — Help with my room
Image 2 — Help with my room
Image 3 — Help with my room
Image 4 — Help with my room
Image 5 — Help with my room
Image 6 — Help with my room
▲ 30 r/DecorAdvice+1 crossposts

Help with my room

Help me improve my bedroom. I don’t really have the ability to change the actual furniture but can move it around the room. The tv location can’t be fixed. The wall color is swanky grey and carpet is a medium grey if you can’t tell.

Layout specifics:
The curtains by the standing mirror are a window
The white door leads to living area
The grey curtain goes to the bathroom.

(Last pic is a different comforter but same room)

u/lolomgsup — 5 days ago
▲ 6 r/DecorAdvice+1 crossposts

Help with bedroom

Help me improve my bedroom. I don’t really have the ability to change the actual furniture but can move it around the room. The tv location can’t be fixed. The wall color is swanky grey and carpet is a medium grey if you can’t tell.

Layout specifics:
The curtains by the standing mirror are a window
The white door leads to living area
The grey curtain goes to the bathroom.

(Last pic is a different comforter but same room)

u/lolomgsup — 5 days ago
▲ 12 r/ABA+1 crossposts

Right now, Florida Medicaid (through Sunshine Health) is enforcing hidden weekly limits on ABA therapy—a medically necessary treatment for children with autism. Here's what's happening:
Kids authorized for autism services over six months are now getting claims *denied mid-week*, even though authorized units remain. The weekly limits aren't visible to providers. Unused sessions don't roll over. And when claims get rejected, families and therapists are left scrambling to appeal *after* services were already delivered.
This matters because ABA therapy needs to be flexible. A child might need more BCBA oversight (that's the clinical supervisor adjusting treatment) during behavioral escalation, staff changes, or safety concerns. These weekly caps force providers to make billing decisions instead of medical decisions—potentially delaying care when kids need it most.
I started a petition asking Sunshine Health and Florida Medicaid to make these limits transparent, keep them workable, and let therapists respond when children's needs change. This isn't about eliminating oversight—it's about alignment between policy and what actually helps kids.
If you have kids on Medicaid receiving ABA, or you work in this space, this probably hits close to home. What would you want if this was your family? If this matters to you, consider signing and sharing.

u/lolomgsup — 16 days ago