One is a husband whose wife is suffering from a stroke. One is a woman whose nephew is suffering from a mental illness. And one has just buried her mother a few short weeks ago and is thankful she got to celebrate her loved mum’s life with a funeral. She is also glad the will was in place.

Froese elaine
Certified Farm Family Coach
Elaine Froese, CSP, CAFA, CHICoach and her team of coaches are here to help you find harmony thro...

Everyone has a story of loss. We are all going to die. I recall the tombstone in an Irish cemetery that said, “Meet me in heaven.” That’s a joyous thought. How on earth can you write a will with joy?

1. Know that writing a will document and signing it will not kill you. A 1997 University of Guelph study discovered 20 percent of farmers did not have a will with the reasoning, “If I make a will, then I will die.”

That is pretty strange logic if you ask me. Writing a will did not kill my mother at 65; an asthma infection did.

During the season of her passing (she was palliative for two weeks), her new drafted will was not signed, as she was comatose. Even the best laid out transition plans are derailed when new documents are not signed.

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2. Have you signed your current will? Do it. Remember to finish off the work you started with your lawyer. It will likely take three visits to the law office.

One to draft the will or update your current one. A next visit to talk about the new draft to make sure it meets your intentions. Finally, a third visit to sign the will and take your copy home to read to your family.

Ask on the first call to make your appointment what the range of costs is going to be. The more complex your will is, the more expensive, but it is still a worthy investment.

3. Seriously Elaine, I have to read it to my family? This is where the joy part comes in. Most people I know don’t relish surprises. When you drafted your will, you had to choose a trustworthy executor.

Hopefully, this is an adult successor or adults in your family circle who are good with details, timely and accountable for their actions. One of our executors is a lawyer family member plus our successor. In order to get ready to execute a will with timely skill, it helps to know what is in it.

Our son knows which law office holds the original will and where the copies are in my office. When people know the plans you have upon your death, you get to explain your intent as to why you laid out your wishes the way the will states. This is a healthy conversation where you get to talk about your “why” in how you did your will.

4. Eliminate the confusion of terms. I recently coached a farm family who found an older will years after the father’s passing. This created huge conflict when the family realized Dad had changed his original intentions.

Are people allowed to change their plans? Yes. The problem is when dead people’s wishes keep fueling the fire of conflict for those beneficiaries who have made financial decisions based on the current reality of the legal will presented.

Note: I am not a lawyer, and this column is not to be taken as legal advice. I leave that good work to my CAFA colleagues who are excellent agricultural lawyers, but I think it is a good idea to destroy old copies of old will documents.

5. Educate your executors. Use an executor checklist to get ready to be a great executor. Email me, and I will send you Laura McDougald-Williams’ checklist for executors. She’s a rural lawyer who believes in getting ready.

All lawyers I have met say “no way” to handwritten wills, so take your handwritten wishes to a legal office and have a legal will written up.

6. Watch the “Finding Fairness in Farm Transition” video on YouTube at “Elaine Froese Farm Family Coach.” I suspect you feel writing a will with joy is impossible because you and your spouse are fighting about what to give your children.

First, you can draft your own will if your spouse refuses to do theirs. The deceased who dies intestate (without a will) is the one going to leave the other spouse with chaos.

I embrace the definition of fairness as “helping everyone be successful.” Ask each of your beneficiaries to tell you what they expect from your estate, and ask “What does fairness look like to you?”

Your assets are yours. You get to choose regardless of the expectations of adult beneficiaries.

7. Find joy in giving gifts with a warm hand and tell the story behind the gift. Don’t forget the heritage gifts, including the garden plants. My mother had an amazing lily collection that met sudden death when sprayed with Roundup. I was not asked if I would like to transplant her decades of work to my garden.

I did receive her mink coat five years before her passing, with her blessing, and I wear that coat with great memories of my mom’s love for me.

The new Swedish book on “death de-cluttering” says at age 65 we should downsize our stuff as a gift to our children so they don’t have to wade through it when we pass on.

When you write your will, you can add a letter or list of possessions you wish to go to certain people. It would be helpful for the executor to have a copy of this list.

I asked my family which pieces of art they would like – and was surprised that only one piece was valued by my sister and one by my children. Your treasured stuff might be junk to others.

8. Joy comes when you know you have enough money. Outdated wills were made decades ago when interest rates were different and land values much lower. A good financial plan to carry you into your 90s is wise.

If you are going to run out of money, check with your beneficiaries and children to see who is going to help you continue to pay bills as you age and require more care.

“That was then, and this is now” may be the response to promises you made when finances were flush, and bread was less than a dollar.

Have a conversation and be very transparent about your financial concerns with your family and your financial planner. Remember to support charities if you have the means to do so.

If you are like the 53 percent in my seminar who did not have a will, I challenge you to get it done. Email me to tell me your will is signed, and I will mail you a copy of my award-winning 2006 book Planting the Seed of Hope.  end mark

Elaine Froese is happy to breathe on her farm near Boissevain, Manitoba. Life is precious. Death is not to be feared. Visit Elaine's store for communication resources to get the tough conversations started.

PHOTO: Last Will and Testament. Photo by Getty Images.

Elaine Froese