JayB
Life of the Party
Eventually. Or so I hear.
For the past year or so my "default activity" has been dealing with the legal and logistical issues that came about when an increasingly eccentric uncle who'd self-estranged from the family about a decade ago died suddenly and left behind an estate that was about as literally and metaphorically messy as possible. As in "He's been hoarding the family home into oblivion for the past 40 years, there are multiple vehicles on the property, and no one has any idea how to get keys to the house or access to any financial documents" messy. And roughly 2,000 miles away.
This was a ~1,000SF house, and it took a professional cleaning crew that specializes in biohazardous cleaning a full month to clean and decontaminate the house, and the tab ran to $60K, which - frankly - seemed like a bargain. "Looks like at some point he was no longer able to access the restroom and took to using bottles and buckets..."Before that came waiting months for a probate court to hear our case and grant us the legal status necessary to settle his affairs, meanwhile the bills for utilities, insurance, etc kept piling up.
Before that we had a situation in my family where a very beloved relative sustained a TBI and slowly decayed in a vegetative state for months. Once again bills were piling up, and it was only someone finding what looked like a password to their laptop on a post-it note in a filing cabinet made it possible to access the financial accounts and insurance information that made it possible to navigate through very tricky financial territory before they passed away. The financial stuff was the easy part. Everyone in the family having their own opinion about when they would want us to throw in the towel and let them pass away was much more difficult.
I realize this is a "Sir - this is a fly-fishing forum" sort of post, but since the demo on this site skews older and I'm in a position to certify that you do, in fact, want to avoid probate and that multiple people attempting to divine when someone would want to pull the plug isn't a pleasant experience for anyone, I thought I'd pass along three key takeaways for anyone that's in the 50+ demo that might help someone else:
1) Make a will. IMO paying someone to do if for you is money well spent. For bonus points update it every 5 years.
2) Make a folder that contains all of your financial assets, insurance policies, and passwords and let 1-2 trusted people in your family know where to find it.
3) Look into end-of-life planning. When we were going through the awful "What would they want" situation described above, I found myself thinking "Someone should make an app where you can just hold-up your phone and archive a video where you describe the sort of end-of-life care you want, so that your loved ones aren't left guessing." Since that time - it seems like that wish has been granted, and there are now lots of apps out there that make it easy to avoid making things hard on the folks that you've left behind.
www.crossroadshospice.com
www.nerdwallet.com
Mind you, if I go first my wife will still be cursing me for afflicting her with the task of disposing of an inordinate amount of fishing, skiing, climbing, kayaking/rafting gear and books "Who the hell are Will and Ariel Durant and WTF do we have all 11 volumes of their 'Story of Civilization' taking up 3 feet of shelf-space?" "He had 30 years to convert all of this *ProTube* BS in to actual flies..." but at least she'll know when to pull the plug and where all of the money is....
For the past year or so my "default activity" has been dealing with the legal and logistical issues that came about when an increasingly eccentric uncle who'd self-estranged from the family about a decade ago died suddenly and left behind an estate that was about as literally and metaphorically messy as possible. As in "He's been hoarding the family home into oblivion for the past 40 years, there are multiple vehicles on the property, and no one has any idea how to get keys to the house or access to any financial documents" messy. And roughly 2,000 miles away.
This was a ~1,000SF house, and it took a professional cleaning crew that specializes in biohazardous cleaning a full month to clean and decontaminate the house, and the tab ran to $60K, which - frankly - seemed like a bargain. "Looks like at some point he was no longer able to access the restroom and took to using bottles and buckets..."Before that came waiting months for a probate court to hear our case and grant us the legal status necessary to settle his affairs, meanwhile the bills for utilities, insurance, etc kept piling up.
Before that we had a situation in my family where a very beloved relative sustained a TBI and slowly decayed in a vegetative state for months. Once again bills were piling up, and it was only someone finding what looked like a password to their laptop on a post-it note in a filing cabinet made it possible to access the financial accounts and insurance information that made it possible to navigate through very tricky financial territory before they passed away. The financial stuff was the easy part. Everyone in the family having their own opinion about when they would want us to throw in the towel and let them pass away was much more difficult.
I realize this is a "Sir - this is a fly-fishing forum" sort of post, but since the demo on this site skews older and I'm in a position to certify that you do, in fact, want to avoid probate and that multiple people attempting to divine when someone would want to pull the plug isn't a pleasant experience for anyone, I thought I'd pass along three key takeaways for anyone that's in the 50+ demo that might help someone else:
1) Make a will. IMO paying someone to do if for you is money well spent. For bonus points update it every 5 years.
2) Make a folder that contains all of your financial assets, insurance policies, and passwords and let 1-2 trusted people in your family know where to find it.
3) Look into end-of-life planning. When we were going through the awful "What would they want" situation described above, I found myself thinking "Someone should make an app where you can just hold-up your phone and archive a video where you describe the sort of end-of-life care you want, so that your loved ones aren't left guessing." Since that time - it seems like that wish has been granted, and there are now lots of apps out there that make it easy to avoid making things hard on the folks that you've left behind.
End-of-Life Planning: There’s an App for That
Crossroads defines four end-of-life planning apps to help patients and families prepare.
Dealing With Death? There’s an App for That - NerdWallet
End-of-life planning apps aim to ease the difficult, complex and expensive process of preparing for death and navigating life after loss
Mind you, if I go first my wife will still be cursing me for afflicting her with the task of disposing of an inordinate amount of fishing, skiing, climbing, kayaking/rafting gear and books "Who the hell are Will and Ariel Durant and WTF do we have all 11 volumes of their 'Story of Civilization' taking up 3 feet of shelf-space?" "He had 30 years to convert all of this *ProTube* BS in to actual flies..." but at least she'll know when to pull the plug and where all of the money is....

