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The following crossed my desk recently. The author gave me
permission to share her story:
"Please alert people to something we're
experiencing right now - having to clean up the mess of
someone not naming more than one person as beneficiary on
a life insurance policy. We are having an impossible time
trying to get the funeral expenses paid for my sister and
my mother. They died within four days of each other, and
they left each other as beneficiary of their life
insurance policies.
'If the person listed as a beneficiary dies, the
insurance benefit goes into their estate.
'The problem is, neither of them had a will,
either."
(Aside: This means that both estates, the mother's and
the daughter's, will have to be probated by the Court, and
the Court will decide who gets what. The process can be
lengthy, and it can be expensive. The family might not see
the funeral money for a while.)
"Also, please alert people to be sure that the
person they choose to be their medical decision maker -
the person who has Medical Power of Attorney - is willing
to do what they would want done. Review the mental
capacity of the appointed person regularly.
'My 85 year old Mother couldn't bring herself to honor
my sister's Living Will that said she wanted to be allowed
to go. The doctor wouldn't write a letter stating Mother
wasn't capable of making these decisions for my sister,
who was in a coma.
'So, my sister was put on life support, even though
there was no hope that she would ever awaken or live a
productive life. She lingered for months on a ventilator.
'My family and I wish we had thought about all these
things sooner. We are taking a closer look at our own
papers now."
She is soooo right.
Life insurance is something we all tend to forget
about. When you started that new job, you made out your
employer's insurance beneficiary papers on the first day.
Have you thought about them since?
What about your Medical and Financial Powers of
Attorney (you do have them, don't you?). If you've
designated your spouse on one or both, what happens if
you're in an accident together? Is there a secod person
named who can step in?
If you made arrangements for your children when they
were babies, are there things you should change now
thatthey're older? Now that several years have gone by,
would you still appoint the same people to care for your
children in the event of a catastrophe?
Do you have a will? If not, some stranger in a black
robe is going to be making decisions for you one day.
What about your parents? If one of them has passed
away, has the survivor made the necessary changes to legal
documents?
If one parent is in poor health or getting confused, is
he or she still the only one legally appointed to make
decisions for the other?
This doesn't really have anything to do with your age.
Everyone over the age of 18 should give some thought to
these questions, and then take action. Should you do
something about it right now, before something goes
tragically wrong?
You Betcha!
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About
The Author
©
2004 Molly Shomer, All Rights Reserved.
You are
free to use this article as long as you
include complete attribution, including
live web site link and email link. Please
notify me where the material will appear.
The attribution should read:
"Molly
Shomer helps when you're struggling with
eldercare. Find articles, resources, tools
and support at http://www.eldercareteam.com
molly@eldercareteam.com |
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