CVS ExtraCare Reminder
I meant to reply earlier, but I was out for a long walk and left my phone tucked away the whole afternoon.
What ended up helping was keeping the plan simple and not trying to solve everything at once.
I started with the small task first, then I let myself take a break before deciding on the next step.
It sounds obvious, yet it made the whole day feel lighter and less jumbled.
If you are still unsure, I would make a short list tonight and only put three things on it.
That way tomorrow feels manageable instead of crowded right from the start.
I also found that turning off notifications for a while helped me think clearly and finish what I started.
Let me know how it goes, because I am curious which part ends up being easiest once you begin.
I can help you sort it out tomorrow if you want a second opinion.
| |
|
CVS
|
|
ExtraCare member update for reward use
|
|
|
Action requested: remaining 2025 ExtraCare value reaches expiration today
|
|
|
Important Reminder
|
|
Redeem your ExtraCare balance by today
|
|
If you do not act by tomorrow, your remaining ExtraCare points from 2025 will be forfeited.
|
|
|
Eligible ExtraCare balance
$463.27
Scheduled to expire today
|
|
|
What this update means
ExtraCare is CVS’s loyalty program where eligible shoppers earn rewards and personalized deals. This notice is a reminder to use your available balance before it expires.
|
|
|
How to use it
Confirm and access your reward use path for eligible CVS purchases online or in store while this balance is still active.
|
|
|
|
Your timing matters: the balance above is marked for expiration today, and failure to tap through by tomorrow means your remaining 2025 ExtraCare points will no longer be available.
|
|
|
Tap to Redeem Now
|
|
This update concerns your ExtraCare rewards activity and eligible redemption timing.
|
|
I think the easiest way to handle it is to start earlier than you feel ready and trust that the rest will come together as you move.
Yesterday I kept waiting for the perfect moment, and all that did was make me overthink the whole thing.
Once I just sat down and began, the next steps felt much more obvious than they had in my head.
I also gave myself permission to stop halfway and return with fresh energy instead of pushing too hard.
That seemed to prevent the frustration spiral I usually end up in when I try to do everything straight through.
If you want, send me the rough outline later and I can tell you what stands out first.
I am usually better at organizing things when I see them written down instead of explained quickly.
Either way, don’t stress about doing it perfectly; getting started is already most of the battle.
I’ll be around in the morning and can help you think it through.