ArlyA
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2016
- Messages
- 12,064
- Tractor
- Outlander max 1000 6x6, Ego lawn mower
Power of attorney laws are quite different in each state.
Agreed. That said, since your wife's parents only have two children, I think it's something that we can agree upon that should be known between your wife and her brother.Power of attorney laws are quite different in each state.
I'm in the process of redoing all of this with my mother and the husband she married late in life. There's my sister, my wife, and I on my mother's side, and a son and wife on her husband's side.I'm a little worried. What happens if my wife and her sister disagree on what should happen to my MIL if she is in a hospital and her (my MIL) life is in both my wife's and sisters hands?
On the subject of burial plots.... when we buried my father in-law at their plot, I told my wife we should get a plot near them. There were plenty all around.I and wife recently completed Wills and POA paper work. California has separate Power of Attorney documents for health decisions and financial decisions. I was advised the health one needs to be re-declared from time to time because no health provider will make major decisions based on an outdated version.
Each of us delegated POA to the other, with younger daughter living an hour away as first alternate. Older daughter lives overseas. She is named second alternate because it is not certain that she could be contacted timely. In all cases responsibility rests on only one person, not shared.
For our Wills and Successor Trustee of the Trust we created for estate distribution, the same persons are named, surviving spouse > local daughter > overseas daughter > then husband of local daughter. He deals with contracts in his job representing a major corporation so estate law wouldn't be over his head. The daughter overseas agreed to defer to him unless she is living stateside when the time comes.
The one aspect of end-of-life planning not yet faced is signing up for cremation and a burial plot for the urn with a brass plate, adjacent to those of other family members. Mom and her parents had this all arranged for themselves well in advance. We really need to complete this, we are nearing the decade of life where nearly half of our relatives didn't make it into the subsequent decade.
Dad had survived both Polio and Tuberculosis long ago, in each case returning to normal living after more than a year as an invalid. He had arranged for his body to be donated to UC-San Francisco School of Medicine for research. I got a call from them explaining we wouldn't get back any remains to bury, asking if this was acceptable to the family. No problem, that's what he wanted. I intend to put a brass plate naming him on the headstone of his parents, but haven't gotten around to it.
But the most troublesome problem left for our heirs is what Arley and others are facing now, tons of 'stuff' to dispose of. Maybe a quarter of it worth keeping as spares - bedding, tools, some furniture, etc, but all needing to be sorted piece by piece. I can't get wife to look at any of this. Daughters have helped some, for example going through the boxes that wife saved of their 'refrigerator art' (children's drawings) they created 30~40 years ago. But I catch hell if I make any decisions of this 'precious' stuff. I frequently warn wife we will die buried under sliding piles of worthless stuff if we don't slim down drastically.![]()
Depend on how well you are getting along with the survivors!sleep on my stomach with my arms crossed under my pillow. Not sure how that would go over at an open casket service.
still working on it , sister was around for awhile wouldnt let me throw anything , goin to get another dumpster i filled up 3 this summer , sucks but you cant save everything, got some items too drop off at good will , someone broke in and stole a bunch of good stuffFolks. I've been in northern MN for a few weeks to move the spouses parents into assisted living. Her mom developed dementia and her dad has declined ability to care for her over the past year. Spouse had been in Ely for over a month now to help them move and now we're cleaning out the place which is quite the job since they bought the place in the early 1960s. Gee whiz this is a job, and we have a dumpster order. House is going up for sale etc, etc. This is why I've not been posting much.
Given the option of an open casket vs a celebration of life event, I'd go celebration of life event.Another dilemma thought for eternal rest.... I like to sleep on my stomach with my arms crossed under my pillow. Not sure how that would go over at an open casket service.
So I think I'll just get cremated.![]()
I strongly suspect that, when the time comes, I'll have no preference or choice in the matter.Given the option of an open casket vs a celebration of life event, I'd go celebration of life event.