Showing posts with label prepay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prepay. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2014

Have U Discussed Distribution of House Contents With Your Kids After U Die?

This is a great illustration of why you/we should all preplan (and prepay) our death while we are still alive.  Be responsible and tell everyone your plans:  cemetery, burial, cremation, house, contents of house, etc. etc. etc.  Man up!!  Woman up!!!   Come on!



Children must share parents' estate

When children fight over their parents“ heirlooms, there is usually more involved - grief and other powerful emotions and memories - than just the value of the china or silver. (iStock)
When children fight over their parents' heirlooms, there is usually more involved - grief and other powerful emotions and memories - than just the value of the china or silver. (iStock)
When children fight over their parentsĀ“ heirlooms, there is usually more involved - grief and other powerful emotions and memories - than just the value of the china or silver. (iStock)GALLERY: Children must share parents' estate
Q: My elderly parents passed away this year, and I'm absolutely furious with my sisters. Who says the china, silver and heirlooms should go to the daughters? I'm the oldest, and the only son, and my wife has been like another daughter to my parents. And although my sisters and I have gotten along well in the past, one of my sisters already grabbed the china that my wife and I wanted. The other took the silver, and they already split up Mom's jewelry. We can't even see straight to talk about the house. What should we do?- Grumpy and GrievingA: I am very sorry to hear about your loss. Unfortunately, this situation is common, and it's sad to hear about so much fighting during a time you should be supporting each other.
If your parents unwisely didn't discuss their wishes with all of you while they could, you may have to hire a mediator or estate lawyer if you can't sort things out on your own. It's rare that any solution will be perceived as "fair," but life is not fair. Try hard to accept decisions gracefully in honor of your parents' memory.
I've heard of retirees divvying up their possessions to their adult children and living with paper plates, buying duplicate sets of china so all their kids inherit the same things, or even donating everything to charity to avoid the situation.
MORE COVERAGE
  • Mother wants her to reveal cousin's secrets
  • Her father-in-law won't talk to her
  • Mom's got a thing for her speech therapist
  • Usually, there is more going on than just the value of the heirlooms. Not only are people already grieving, they're responding to powerful emotions and memories. Some think heirlooms are worth more money than they actually are. To others, it's a power play or evidence of parents playing favorites. I've also heard of people inheriting a houseful and not wanting any of it.A friend of mine went out and bought a matching set of silver because she liked her parents' set so much and her older sister wanted to inherit it. This might be a great idea for you. The dishes may be expensive - or maybe not - but it would be less painful than fights with your family.
    My condolences go to all of you. Good luck and let me know how it goes.


    Jennifer Adams is a designer, author, and TV personality. To contact her: @JenniferAdams

    Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/living/20140411_Children_must_share_parents__estate.html#kY8AsTktHRQ0H5gy.99

    Friday, November 8, 2013

    Artsy Coffins-Have You Designed Your Own Coffin Yet? Or Even Bought One? PREPLAN&PREPAY!!


    La Salle University Art Museum Presents Jeff:  Coffins and Cages 
    La Salle University Art Museum is pleased to present the exhibition Jeff:  Coffins and Cages, September 19– 
    December 6, 2013. Opening reception, September 18, 2013, 5-7 p.m. Artist’s talk, December 6, 2013, 1-2 p.m. 
    in Olney Hall, room 100. 
    The exhibition, Jeff:  Coffins and Cages, demonstrates the artist’s ongoing interest in themes of confinement 
    and mortality over the past three decades. Utilizing the compositional devices of architectural cages within 
    cages, and designs for the artist’s own coffin, the artist works through variations on the two motifs. This 
    exhibition includes work from the early 1980s to the present in a range of media including pencil and ink, 
    charcoal and pastel, mixed media and oil on paper, colored etchings, and a cast bronze sculpture. 

      www.jeffart.com


    "Glass Coffin to be Shattered When in Place" 1981-91, plexiglass. 77" x 32" x 16-1/4"


    "Coffin with Sealed Seven Containing Secret's for Eternal Bliss" 1986, mix media inside painted & lacquered wood, 37"x16"x7-1/2"; (Coll: Peter Stern)



    "Coffin for Changing Direction" 1984-91, pine, plywood, 16-1/2" x 37-1/2" x 15-1/2"

    "Coffin with Bars to Prevent Escape" 1981-4, steel, locks, 77" x 32" x 16-1/2"


    "Artist's Coffin with Extra One Tied Underneath to Contain Art Critic" 1981-3, top: mahogany, bottom: pine, nylon strap, 82"x34"x32"

    Coffin Installation, Alternative Museum, NYC, "Ashes to Ashes: Visions of Death" 1983




    Friday, July 6, 2012

    What If You Died Tomorrow? PREPLAN!!

    Every day there are stories about people dying unexpectedly.  Are we ever really ready for a loved one's death?  Why don't we all give the gift to our survivors of preplanning AND pre-paying our funeral and cemetery arrangements?!

    The Rev. Buddy Stallings of St. Bartholomew's Church in New York City recently wrote some exquisitely eloquent words about the sudden death at 7:30 A.M. of a church employee who was already at work at the church.  The employee was 58.   He was a father, brother, son, etc.:



    Offering all we have
    THE REV. F. M. "BUDDY" STALLINGS
    JUNE 29, 2012  
    Buddy by Kara Flannery CCPG 2012On Wednesday morning Rex Villa,our Lead Engineer, arrived at work before seven as he normally did to start a very early and conscientious day. By 7:30 several of us were standing heartbroken and fearing the worst by his side as a gurney transported him to the hospital. In hardly any time at all, the doctors announced what we already knew: Rex had died. He was 58 years old but only by a few days.

    Rex was quiet but not as quiet as I thought. The colleagues who worked most closely with him have told great stories about his terrific sense of humor. I knew him most as one who had a ready smile, an immediate willingness to do all he could to help, and the ability to repair complicated systems that saved us lots of money.

    As his wife, children and large extended family gathered around him in the ER at the hospital, I came very quickly to know much more about him. Beloved husband and father, son (his father is still alive; I just can't imagine what he must be feeling), brother -- his was a pivotal role in a big full life outside St. Bart's. One of his sisters today shared a conversation in which he and she had recently engaged. They were talking about how rough life can be, the drone of work and the regularity of doing it all over day-after-day. She recalled Rex's words like this, "I guess we weren't made to be rich, but what we have is the opportunity to work every day and provide for our family. And that is enough." In my book these are the words of a deeply wise man.

    No matter how long I am in this business or in this life for that matter, I have learned again this week something that is a huge truth. There is not much to be said to people facing such loss from their lives -- lives that looked and were one way late Tuesday evening that morphed into something so foreign a few hours later as to be truly unimaginable. Rex's beautiful wife, Gina, and his three bright teenage kids are in un-chartered water. Nothing seems okay because it isn't. And nothing really will ever make this loss okay; but at some point, people who love them and have earned the right to say something like this will promise this family that someday it won't be so horrible as it is right now. And slowly they will come to find that that is true.

    Until then, all of us who cared for Rex and now find our hearts breaking for his family will just stand quietly by them, offering all we have, which is our presence