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Essential Tips for Men’s Health and Estate Planning
June is Men’s Health Month. This is a time dedicated to highlighting health issues that primarily affect men and promoting the early detection and treatment of diseases among men and boys. This month, let's focus on you, gentlemen. You already know that taking care of your health allows you to prolong your life and enhance your quality of life. But have you given serious thought to how your health directly impacts your future? Your legacy? The ones you love the most? Do you know the essential tips for men’s health and estate planning?
I Just Need A Will
When you think of estate planning, a Will is usually the first thing that comes to mind. In fact, most people who contact me tell me they don’t need anything complicated for their estate. They say I just need a Will. Indeed, Wills have a reputation as the number one estate planning tool. Wills can be seen all over TV shows and movies, from the dramatic “reading of the Will” (which rarely happens in real life) to characters plotting how best to defraud their billionaire uncle’s Will in order to inherit his lavish estate.
Dutiful Child Or Financial Manipulator?
Our parents age and their physical and mental capacities diminish. We, as their adult children recognize our parents’ decreasing ability to care for themselves. We see that we need to step in and help them. Often, one of us children will take over the bulk of the responsibilities such as taking the parent to doctor’s appointments or the attorney’s office. We see our parent begin to depend on thatchild more and more. So, our parent decides to appoint that child as a trusted decision maker. Our parent may even give them a larger inheritance to compensate them for their time. At the same time, the other childre must take extreme care to ensure that our elderly parent is not being exploited by a manipulative caretaker. We need to ask ourselves, is our sibling caretake being a dutiful child or a financial manipulator?
Essential Estate Planning Tips for College Students
You may have been running around for weeks, getting your new college student off to school. It's exhilarating, and your heart likely is bursting at the seams. You're probably prouder than words can express, but you’re also a little afraid, too. How can you make sure your kid is going to be safe at school, their new home away from home? A new, matching Bed Bath and Beyond sheet set for the dorm sounds great, but it just doesn't seem like quite enough, does it? So what else can you do? How about learning essential estate planning tips for college students?
Your Post Honeymoon Estate Planning Checklist
Your wedding is over, and the day was absolutely perfect. You went away on your honeymoon with your new spouse and had the time of your lives. Now you are back and can breathe a sigh of relief and watch the rest of the years ahead unfold before your eyes. Well, not so fast. Now that your honeymoon is over, there are several things you should be mindful of to make sure that the legal and financial parts of your life properly reflect your newly married status.
What Does An Elder Law Attorney Do For Seniors?
So what exactly does an elder law attorney do for seniors anyway? Elderly or disabled individuals are the focus of a broad array of legal concerns referred to as elder law. Practitioners of elder law are legal advocates who strive to devise appropriate legal strategies to help seniors and their families improve their lives. Elder law encompasses an extensive range of topics, including retirement planning, Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare, estate planning, long-term care planning, guardianships, and many others.
Estate Planning vs Elder Law
Estate Planning and Elder Law go hand in hand. While Estate Planning deals with what happens when you die; elder law deals with what happens as you age and /or become disabled.
Strategic Medicaid Planning
The steep costs associated with long-term care have made Medicaid planning a growing trend for middle-class Americans. Legally restructuring financial resources helps people qualify before the need for care arises.