From Next Avenue – By Myrna Marofsky –

Recently, I sat in a law office at a long conference table with my two daughters beside me. Across from us was an attorney with a stack of legal pages for me to sign. They were documents that I had spent months thinking about and discussing with her — my revocable trust, health care directive, and other papers that signaled we were talking about me without me.

This lovely young attorney (isn’t every professional we turn to these days younger than us?) was doing her job efficiently, speaking her legalese to us matter-of-factly, pointing to legal sections in documents just as she had done with others many times before. She was explaining things we knew we needed to know, but truthfully, didn’t want to hear, especially when delivered passively, as if we were being given instructions for a used car that was about to die, all as a clock ticked away and was about to ding on the hour.

To her, it was routine. To us, it was sobering. My daughters were absorbing the reality that their mom’s future wishes were now contained in legal documents. I was sitting there, very much alive, listening to my own death being discussed as if I were already gone.

Difficult Conversations

Sitting and listening and glancing at my daughters, I was suddenly struck with a wave of emotions. In the months leading up to this meeting, I was dutifully reviewing legal paragraphs I barely understood and agreeing to Article this or Section that. I was determined to check the box on another To Do item instead of absorbing what it really was.

There was no acknowledgment that these are difficult things to discuss. No box of Kleenex on the table, just in case it was needed for a tear or two, something my daughter told me after she had hidden from view.

This wasn’t the first time I faced a professional advisor in a “sign here” transaction that felt insensitive. Accountants, financial advisors and realtors do their jobs, and in doing so, may not even realize their clients may be at their lowest points.

Do you need an attorney to handle your Estate Planning, Probate, Special Needs, or Medicaid/Medicare issues? Find a qualified member of the Ohio Chapter of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys in the Ohio NAELA Directory.