
As you probably are aware, the longer a person can put off collecting, the larger the payment can be. I’d like to wait a few more years until I am at the full retirement age, but I am still considering my options.
It’s just a matter of weighing, balancing, and figuring out your personal situation. It’s actually sort of a gamble. Are you going to live long enough and wait to collect? Or should you collect now at the lower rate?
Anyway, when I entered the office, most of the chairs were occupied with people waiting for their name/number to be called. The rows of chairs were neatly aligned, 8 across and about 7 rows deep. I quickly glanced around to look for a place to sit where I would not be knocking elbows (and possibly other body parts) with the person next to me.
I am sure you’ve been in your local Walmart or maybe your local DMV office? Well, the clientele at the Social Security office falls somewhere in between those two.
I nabbed a seat on the end of the aisle and as I slid into the chair, I tried to move it out and away just ever so slightly. It wouldn’t budge.

I settled into my chair and thought that this would be a great time to just rest my eyes a bit. After closing my eyes, I focused… well…not focused, it was more like I was being FORCED to hear a couple of strange conversations between friendly strangers.
Even the armed Security Guard (why do they need an armed guard?) firmly requested to a few different people to “take their phone conversations outside.” I was surprised because the talking INSIDE was more annoying than the phones…although I agree with the No Phone rules.
I noticed that the long beige wall we were all staring at had a mounting for a TV up high near the ceiling, but a TV was nowhere in sight. And the bathrooms, separate ladies and men’s rooms, were carved right into that very front wall smack-in-the-middle where everyone was facing!
And despite the johns being only 10 feet from the front row, and having only a wooden door between the toilet and the “audience”, it didn’t seem to deter people from using them. There was a constant trek.
Is this what I was being forced to watch? The traffic in and out of the toilets? In the unlikely event that I would have needed to use the restroom, I probably would have gone outside and across the street to the local McDonalds and used their “mcrestrooms” before I walked to the front of the “stage” to use the bathroom in front of at least 50 people.
Every time someone walked out of one of the bathrooms, I wanted to clap. It seemed as if they were coming out into an arena. And every time that person would walk out, I also wondered if they had washed their hands.
I couldn’t help it! Was it only me that found this situation hilarious and bothersome at the same time? This was a brand new building for the social security office. Who WAS the architect?