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To plan, or not to plan, that is the question. - Hamlet's more practical cousin, Irving
A journey of a thousand miles may begin with a single step, but you aren't going to make it to your destination unless you look at a map, plot your course, and prepare for the trip. The same applies to the estate planning process. To plan, or not to plan, there's really no question.
As discussed in the estate planning overview, the estate planning process primarily deals with managing important decisions that must be implemented when you are unable to do so. Before you can manage anything, however, you must first know what there is to manage. This is where some self-examination and some self-assessment come in very handy.
This self-assessment is not personal voyage of self-discovery. You don't need to call Dr. Phil or Dr. Laura or Dr. Ruth to get help. Just sit down and compile a couple of old-fashioned lists--your "A" list and your "B" list.
Your "A" list is your "assets" list on which you itemize your major assets, their location (e.g., checking account number with bank's contact information), their approximate value and how they are owned (e.g., solely, jointly, or in conjunction with a bank which holds a mortgage on your house).
Try to limit your inventory list to major assets. These include:
If you feel strongly about other specific items (such as your beloved collection of baseball cards or porcelain figurines), add them to the list too. The length of your list will vary depending on your wealth building skills and how much of a pack rat you are.
Once you complete the "A" list of your worldly goods, the next step is to determine who will make your "B" list, the "beneficiary" list. Your beneficiary list identifies the persons to whom you want to give your wealth at your death. This usually includes a spouse at the top, followed by children or other relatives, and possibly a companion or close personal friends or a favorite charity.
The bulk of estate planning, then, is to ensure that everything on the "A" list transfers smoothly to everyone indicated on the "B" list should you become incapacitated or die. Applying this principle in practice, many of your assets, for example, will transfer automatically to their intended beneficiary if you use some simple probate avoidance techniques or a trust. The same will occur, except with higher costs and more hassles, via the provisions of a will that goes through probate.
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