I am permanently disabled, so I spend a lot of time at home... every day on the morning television I see these commercials for welfare lawyers who will "fight" to get you accepted for disability benefits. It's always puzzled me. When I applied for SSI, I simply walked into the office with my application, had a very brief physical with a government doctor, sent over medical records from my current team of physicians and surgeons, and signed some papers. There was no fighting involved.
I tend to think that part of the problem is that if you have to "fight" to get accepted for disability you probably shouldn't be getting it. Somebody on SSI who has a personal trainer? Do you know how many years of my life or how much money I would pay just to be physically able to exercise? Grr. I'm sure there are exceptions to this, but they are exceptions. For me the hardest part of the approval process was that to qualify for the benefits I receive you need to have paid into the system for a certain number of fiscal quarters, and as I've been disabled since I was a child and have never been capable of holding a job outside the home, I had to scramble for the documentation of having held an online position for a couple of years and paid social security out of the $200 per month I made there.
I get about $475 each month combined from the feds and the state. I live at home with my parents and don't drive so no gas or rent to pay for, so it's enough for me. It's probably more than I need, honestly. I'm very lucky in that I automatically qualify for Medicaid but I have never needed to use it, as my father is Teamsters and my mother a public school teacher so our health insurance is excellent, and it's a good thing with how much my medical expenses cost! It scares me what would happen if I had to depend on Medicaid; half of my treatments would never be approved and I'd probably be completely bedridden instead of just stuck in the house.
Most of my spending money gets saved up so I can take myself and my sister to Disney once a year for my birthday. Yee ha!
I'm sorry but since you seem to not know a lot about Social Security disability and how it is figured than the highlighted in red is a stupid response. I am 100% disabled via the Veterans Admin but social security has decided that because of my age I can work. Their "doctor" who was supposed to evaluate me even stated that he could tell them nothing on me compared to what the VA sent them. I did not bother fighting but very much regret my mistake by not fighting. Not everyone who is truely disabled can just walk in and out with disability benefits and many do have to fight. Until you walk in their choes than please do NOT make such ignorant comments.
After finishing your post, I see that your easy way of getting SSI is based off of your childhood disability and not off one that developed as an adult, etc.

this is what is wrong in this country....there is nothing wrong with them...at least one should have to work! 
YOU DO IT!