Ok, I'm all over the boards with questions this morning. I should pace myself.
Anyhow, are you redoing your will?
I have one, but I'm assuming any one I make after that overrides the old one (I don't want to go back to the same attorney, it's an hour away). I need to redo it anyway since we got married and my name is different.
I assume I'll just have a basic one now, leaving everything to my husband and daughter (or, if I can get even more vague, "child/children"). And I'll need to say who gets my children if my husband and I die together. And that's another reason I don't want to go to the old attorney, because it's in my hometown with my mother, and my mother will NOT get my children.
And none of these online legal things are cool, right? That sounds good good to be true. I just don't have time to take off to make appointments to see lawyers, even though I KNOW it's important.
Re: Are You Redoing Your Will?
We did go to an attorney because we didn't want to miss anything and he did think of some things that we hadn't - like if our selected guardian moves away from the area do we want the kids to go to the back up guardian. Because our entire family is local (grandparents, etc), we didn't want DD being moved if we could help it.
Also the attorney was able to write it so that if we have more kids, adopted or natural, they are all covered. It also takes into account if our children (GOD FORBID) pre-decease us, what happens to our estate. We didn't realize how involved it could be so I'm really glad we did the attorney.
It helped that I have pre-paid legal through work so it was basically free
I would never in a million years recommend an online legal site! I'd go to an attorney, I know there are attorney's on this board and I would venture a guess to say they would agree. Every state is different and each have different laws and expectations, so how can one "form" fit all 50 states? They don't, and that form may not address your personal needs.
In Illinois you can generalize "child/children" you don't have to specify names, although you can, and in Illinois if you want to just make a few changes you can add a "codicile" to your will, which is generally cheaper. Just some things to think about.
I look at going to an attorney's office like going to a doctors appointment. They went to school a long time, they have a very expensive specialty, and they have very stressful jobs (much like everyone else nowadays) but they need their evenings and weekends off too, just like the rest of us.
ETA: Another thing on my to do list is buying a cremation policy.
Normally, I'd absolutely jump on seeing a lawyer...and I might feel better doing so in person, but I'm then wondering if maybe we don't just wait until I'm on Maternity Leave. I literally have no time to do it (unless they will see me after 6pm or on a weekend), and my husband works an hour away, so he'd have to take PTO to be there to do his. Which is why the simple form sounded good to me. Now I'm torn.
But, the first step for me is to make sure I have the originals of my current one and to write "I REVOKE THIS WILL" across it. I need to find it.
If you know what you're doing, and the situation is simple, I think following a template and getting it notarized is fine, but that being said, I did hire someone the first time, so I'd just be kind of updating it on my own, not starting from scratch, and I have two lawyer friends who offered to look it over. So I wouldn't be completely blind.
I'd also like to set up a living will at some point. I don't know if same lawyer could do it all?
Some things to think about is if you are leaving your kid(s) to a couple and something happens to one of them do you want the remaining person to have custody? My kids will go to my sister and brother in law but if something happens to my sister they go to our back up person so it's just written as they should be left to my sister. Also do you want the same person handling the kid's trust that has guardianship of your kids or someone else? At what age can your kids have free reign access to the trust?
It was a lot more to think about that I originally thought. Our lawyer sent us a questionnaire to fill out before meeting with him so we had time to think it all through.
But with a child, it's different, and I know you know that. It's a check you aren't ever supposed to see, you know? And, how do you decide how much it should be for? Getting a policy on YOURSELF is one thing. Getting one for someone else is so touchy. I know it's smart, so we need to discuss it, but I have a hard time thinking about it.
And of course, as always, I'm sorry about your loss, but the fact that you can share your experience and offer insight for others is truly selfless of you, and I wanted to just point that out.