What is Your Legacy?
How will you be remembered after you are gone?
Perhaps you don’t care or perhaps you haven’t thought about it.
Maybe, if you are like me, you have thought about it quite a
bit. Two events in my life really got me thinking about this
issue. The first was at my grandmother’s funeral. She lived in a
small town in the south and I remember looking back on the
funeral procession and seeing that it stretched as far as the
eye could see. That small town must have been shut down that
day. Then came my father’s funeral. I remember a stream of
people coming up to me, many whom I didn’t know, telling me
stories of how wonderful a person my father was. I wondered how
many people would come to my funeral and what they would tell my
children about me. What will your legacy be? Here are some
questions to ask yourself.
How is your estate
plan?
Do you have a will? If not, you have chosen to
leave your assets to your heirs in the most confusing and time
consuming manner possible. If so, that’s a great first step but
it may not be enough. A well thought out estate plan leaves your
belongings to your heirs in the most efficient manner while
taking into account their different needs and wants. Your will
might cover large items but what about the small stuff lying
around your house? If have heard horror stories about siblings
who no longer talk because of fights over trivial items not
included in the will. Have you left your home equally to your
two children knowing full well that one will want to live in
while the other will want to sell it? People do things like
these all the time, yet it’s a recipe for disaster.
Are you properly insured?
Will you leave behind enough money for your
family to maintain their lifestyle or a stack of bills? A simple
rule of thumb measure to figure out if you have proper insurance
is cut in half and drop the zero. For example, if you have
$500,000 in life insurance you divide that number in half
($250,000) and drop the zero ($25,000). This is how much annual
income your heirs could expect to receive from the life
insurance proceeds. This example ignores a number of variables
but it is a good starting point in figuring out if you have
proper insurance.
Are you making smart choices with your money?
Are the choices you are making with your money
today in line with the kind of legacy you want to leave? Are you
teaching your children to be financially literate? If you want
to be charitable what are you doing to achieve that goal? If you
want to help with your grandchildren’s education how are you
doing it? You can use your money to accumulate as many
possessions as you want but after you are gone it is all
meaningless. I will never forget going through my father’s
effects after the funeral and seeing tie collection that he was
so proud of. Unfortunately, they were too outrageous for me to
wear and my brother doesn’t wear ties.
What are you doing to make the world a more
beautiful place?
I recently read a book to my daughter entitled
“Miss Rumphius”. It is the story of a young girl who tells her
grandfather that when she grows up she wants to travel to far
away places and live by the sea. He informs her that there is a
third thing she must do, something to make the world more
beautiful. When she grows old she has traveled and lives by the
sea but something is missing. She realizes that she has done
nothing to make the world a more beautiful place. So she starts
spreading flower seeds all over her town, and in short order
flowers were blooming everywhere. What are you doing to make the
world more beautiful?
Matthew Tuttle is the author of "Financial Secrets of my
Wealthy Grandparents". For more information, or to sign up for
his free newsletter, please visit
http://www.matthewtuttle.com.
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