Archive for the tag 'death'

Record Your Life History

Joyce Pierce April 23rd, 2009

Did you ever see the Michael Keaton movie, “My Life”? It’s a real tear-jerker about a high-powered executive, diagnosed with terminal cancer, who’s forced to make plans for his unborn son. He begins filming a home movie, MY LIFE, in which he teaches his son all the things a man must know: how to shave, how to slam dunk, and, most of all, how to love.

If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s a must see!

I looked at the Internet Movie Database, www.imdb.com and learned that the movie was released in 1993. I remember seeing it as a newly-released movie, and later bought the DVD. Critics might not give the movie a high rating, but I agree with one of the comments made on this site about the movie. “Those of you with fathers, those of you who have lost fathers, and those of you who are fathers should see this movie.” That pretty much includes all of us, doesn’t it?

I lost my father when I was a young mother myself. I was mad at him for 20 years after that because he left me. One of the lines in this movie is, “This whole dying thing wasn’t my idea.” It was a message I needed to hear, and of course, I knew that if my father could have had a say in the matter, he would definitely not have died.

The reason I mention this movie is that I love the way it stresses the importance of keeping records! I’ve been a pretty faithful journal keeper all of my adult life. I encouraged my grandfather to write about his life, and I love reading through it, but I sure wish I would have done a video recording of him TELLING me about his life.

In 1991, which was about five years after my grandfather died, my mother came to visit. At the time, she was 71 years old, and in pretty good health. We had just bought a video recorder because every new grandparent has to have one! I had Mom sit on the couch and I set the recorder up on a tripod. I stood behind it and asked her questions. One of the things I do regret is that I didn’t ever come forward and sit beside her, or even give her a hug. There is no record of ME – I am just the voice behind the video.

Here is how we got started:

Tell me about your grandparents.

What were their names?

What do you remember about each one of them?

What about your parents?

What were there names?

What do you remember about them?

Tell me about your siblings. Start with the oldest.

Tell me his name, birth date, what was he like as a child?

What about your oldest sister?

You get the idea. I don’t remember having a script, and watching and listening to it today, you can tell it’s done by an amateur, but the thing that impresses me the most is that I was actually listening to what she had to say, and trying to get her to expand on the topic.

For instance, when she told me she went to Hornbeak High School, I asked her what she remembered about the school. How many were in your graduating class? Who was your best friend?

You can’t script something when you’re really wanting to find out who they are! You just have to listen.

As incredible as it seems to me now, we kept the camera rolling for almost two full hours! I couldn’t get my mother to write one word about her life, but she loved talking about it.

When we finally stopped, I put the tape away and told Mom I wouldn’t show it to anyone until after she passed away. She talked about some sensitive issues that I wasn’t sure she wanted shared with everyone at that point. It was nothing as sensational as the discovery the kids made in “The Bridges of Madison County,” but just some details that I wanted to make sure were recorded correctly.

Seventeen years later, we can now watch my mother’s life story, just the way she wanted to tell it.

When we were told that Mom didn’t have long to live, I took the tape to the video copy store and had three DVDs made. One for me, and one for my sister. The third one was for my aunt. I brought it home and cried as I watched the mother who was animated and very much alive in 1991. There she was on my television screen: talking, making familiar hand gestures, throwing her head back to laugh, with twinkling eyes that were full of life. This was not the mother I had known in recent years; the mother who had merely existed in a worn out body. The mother who was often confused as a result of prescribed medications.

The day Mom passed away, I showed the video to my sister. She couldn’t watch more than about five minutes of it because the emotion of losing our mother was just too much. But she did say something that will forever live in my memory. “Joyce, I don’t know what inspired you to do this, but if I had nothing else of Mom’s, this would be enough. This is priceless.”

Priceless. It truly is priceless.

The wonderful thing about capturing someone on film is that in some ways, they live on forever.

Grandchildren who only knew their great-grandmother as someone who was dependent on us for her care, can learn to know her as was one of the most INdependent people who ever lived. They can come to know her as we all did, when she was the traveling grandma who came to visit quite often. The grandma who took us out for pizza on Saturdays. The grandma who was plump and very snuggable. The grandma my children loved and enjoyed. The grandma who tried to recapture so much of her youth through her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

If you’ve got a video camera on the shelf, get it out! Don’t wait for the next family reunion to record those stories. You may not get Uncle Dave to sit still for two hours, but fifteen minutes is better than nothing.

You don’t need to feel like you’re imposing by asking someone to let you tape their story. Wouldn’t you love to think that someone finds you interesting enough to want to capture your life on camera?

Make every moment count!

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as Women Loving Life Worldwide.  Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter @piercejam.

Slideshow of Life

Joyce Pierce April 23rd, 2009

Ever notice that when a prominent person dies the media has immediate coverage on that person’s life?
I’m sure each network has a team of people working on the lives of prominent people – world leaders, celebrities, and even local officials – just so they’ll be prepared when the time comes.

 

A good friend of mine, Ed, recently lost his father. When he found out my mother was dying, he told me to start gathering pictures so I could put a slide show together. That was the best piece of advice anyone gave me! He told me I could download the program for f*ree here:

 

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/digitalphotography/photostory/default.mspx

 

I got to work immediately because I didn’t know how much time I had. Fortunately, I ended up with about four weeks to accomplish the task. Here’s what I did:

 

*Downloaded the software. I found it very simple to use. Of course, I’m one of those people who only reads directions if I can’t figure it out on my own. This was my kind of software!

 

* Started looking through my own digital files for pictures I had taken over the past 4-5 years. This was pretty simple. It was just a matter of importing the pictures into the program.

 

* Asked other family members to email me with any photos they had. My cousin and a niece were very helpful in coming up with pictures I had never seen before.

 

* Went through photo albums and scanned photos. This was the part that took the most time because once the photo was scanned, I had to crop. I was sure glad I got started early on this part!

 

Before it was over, I had about 15 minutes of video which included about 200 photographs. Photos included individual pictures of Mom, along with pictures of her with her children, grandchildren, and siblings.

 

As I worked on this project, I can’t tell you how many times I thought about how my mother would have LOVED looking at a slide show like this of her life! Why in the world hadn’t I prepared something like this BEFORE the end of her life?

 

Now, here I was, seeing pictures of my mother that were new to me. I wanted answers about some of them. Where was it taken? What do you remember about that day? How old were you?

 

As I imported the pictures, I included whatever information I could come up with on my own. Names of people in the photo, approximate year, clever comments about various poses. She was a real beauty of movie star quality!

 

Since my mother was a free spirit from Tennessee, I wanted to use Elvis’s rendition of “I Did It My Way,” to go along with the 200 pictures I had gathered. For a fee of $19.95, I was able to do that, but by the time I figured all that out, it was too late. Paying this extra money also gave me the ability to burn a copy of the slideshow as a DVD, but once I got back home from the funeral, it didn’t seem to matter.

 

I’ll have to say that the slideshow was one of the “hits” for the folks back home in Tennessee. We all enjoyed watching my mother’s life flash before us because it brought back memories of much happier times in our lives.

 

I know there are many different programs out there to help you tell the story of your family. It doesn’t matter which program you use, or how much money you want to spend.

 

After we got home, I discovered another way of presenting these photos that would allow me to include the music I wanted at no extra cost. www.onetruemedia.com is a very simple program to use, and since it’s online, you don’t have to download anything. As long as you have internet access to show it, it’s great! One of the great features to this one is that you can send a link to family and friends and they can watch it anytime they want.

 

I should put a warning label on this project idea, though! Once you get started, it’s addictive. Realize that you’re probably not going to gather every picture ever taken of that person, and you don’t need five different poses of the same thing (unless they’re all just adorable in their own way!). Just start with what you’ve got, and go from there. You can always add or delete photos whenever you want.

 

Just imagine the possibilities.

 

*What a great way to review and share your vacation photos!

 

*What a great gift for someone! Start now and give them the DVD for birthdays and Christmas.

 

* What a great way to share with family that’s not close by.

 

I’m thinking about making individual slide shows for everyone in my family!

 

Wouldn’t the kids or grandkids love watching a video of themselves?

 

Gosh, who wouldn’t love looking at pictures of themselves and their loved ones!

 

Share the memories.

 

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as Women Loving Life Worldwide.  Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter @piercejam.

Don’t Let the Courts Decide

Joyce Pierce April 23rd, 2009

Terri Schiavo’s name has become a household word, and if her parents lose their appeal to reinsert the feeding tube, Terri’s battle will be over. That doesn’t mean that the fight will be over. There needs to be new legislation that protects those who cannot act for themselves, and are not being kept alive by life support. People like Terri who never put their wishes in writing. In the meantime, there is something you can do for yourself and your loved ones. Complete and sign these documents and have them witnessed by two people who are not related to you, or who will not benefit in any way from your death. Copies can be obtained at your nearest hospital, or you can find them online by doing a search for these documents for your state.

  • Advance Directive
  • Medical Power of Attorney
  •  

     

Emerson Publications has a book that is designed to guide you through the process of recording vital information. All They’ll Need to Know is a 32-page booklet filled with forms that simplify the process of writing down not only personal information (funeral instructions, who to contact, distribution of personal effects), but financial information that will help the family when you can no longer act for yourself. It is a resource handbook that, once completed, will enable family members to make confident decisions according to your wishes. It will help relieve some of the stress in making decisions and will help save money because your survivors won’t make irrational decisions at the time of need.

All They’ll Need to Know provides forms for vital statistics, professional and military records, funeral instructions, names of those to notify, as well as financial information regarding checking and savings accounts, location and contents of safe deposit box, certificates of deposit, stocks, bonds and mutual funds, savings plans, retirement programs, trust accounts, real estate, loans payable and receivable, insurance, and even information on your automobiles and credit cards.

At 32 pages, this 8 ½ by 11-inch booklet is filled with forms that will help individuals find the documents they need to fill in the blanks. Interested individuals can view more information on their website at www.emersonpublications.com/atntk.htm. Suitable for couples so you only need one copy per household.

 

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as WomenLovingLifeWorldwide.com.   Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter  @piercejam.

Establish an Emergency Fund

Joyce Pierce April 23rd, 2009

I recently read Paul Martinelli’s loving story about trying to get to his grandmother, Bella, before she died. He wanted so badly to hold her hand one more time and to tell her he loved her. He tried making travel arrangements to leave immediately, but couldn’t afford the $600 ticket. He had to wait three days to get a supersaver ticket, and when he finally got there, his dear Bella had already passed away. He was too late because he didn’t have the money to get to her in time. He decided at that point that he would never allow himself to sink so low again. He would never be in the position that he couldn’t afford to be close to his family if he needed or wanted to be.

How helpless would you feel if you needed to be there for someone you love, and money was the only thing holding you back?

What if this was the only chance you were given?

What can you do to make sure you’re never caught in this predicament?

Establish an emergency fund! At the very least, have a credit card that isn’t maxed out so you can use it if you have to. In Dave Ramsey’s, “Total Money Makeover,” he teaches the reasons why you should not only get rid of your credit cards, but get rid of the balances. Once you do that, he teaches the importance of the emergency fund. If you have a baby emergency fund of about $1,000, then you won’t ever have to use the credit cards again.

Here’s why an emergency fund is so important. There are just some things you can’t plan for, and the older you get, the more surprises come your way. Believe me. These are just a few that I’ve experienced.

Last week we got a family email telling us that my husband’s cousin had gallbladder cancer. A few days later I got an update saying that the doctors were giving him three to six months to live, but agreed there was nothing they could do for him. They sent him home to die and the family started to gather from all over the country. Today’s update told me that David had passed away this morning. With today’s gas prices, it could be a real hardship for some to even drive to the funeral. It would take some serious calculating to see if it would be less expensive to fly or drive, and if you have to rent a car when you get there, that just adds to the cost.

Sometimes you have some advance warning, and sometimes you don’t. Last year when we were told my mother wouldn’t live another week or two, there were grandkids in other states who wanted to see her one last time.

My niece called the airline to make a reservation. The usual fare of a couple of hundred dollars more than doubled on such short notice. When she told them that she needed to make this trip because her grandmother was dying, they told her about the bereavement fare. They said if she brought back the documentation proving that her grandmother was actually dying, they would refund part of her fare. She bought the ticket, and after going through the hassle of getting what she needed for this “discount”, I think she only got about fifty dollars back. The bereavement fare is a joke. Don’t ever believe that these companies really feel sorry for you. The agent might, but she has to follow company policy, and with so many airlines filing bankruptcy, they’re out to get all they can.

When our friend, Mark, was killed recently on his motorcycle, all the members of his family were en route for a family reunion that weekend. Unfortunately, he was killed before they got there, but his widow found great comfort in being surrounded by their family. But as soon as they all gathered in Houston, they had to start making arrangements to either drive or fly to Kansas. Mark was born in Kansas, grew up there, and that’s where he wanted to be buried. While many of them had probably used credit cards to get to Houston, now they had additional charges to get to Kansas.

Interesting how the place you call “home” as a child is where most people want to be laid to rest when they go back “home.”

My mother had prepaid for her funeral arrangements in Tennessee ten years before her death. She was born in Tennessee, spent a great deal of her life there, and wanted to be buried on the piece of land her family had donated as a cemetery. While my sister had flown to Houston in Mom’s last days to be with her, she now had to go back home, gather her family, and then make the drive to Tennessee. At the same time, we were making our drive from Houston. My sister’s family and mine all met at an off-season lodge with a friendly, family atmosphere. We were all totally surprised when they did give us a discount at our departure. Of course this was in a town of only a few hundred people where everyone knew everyone. They truly were sorry for our loss.

People just don’t grow up and stay in their own hometown anymore, but for some reason we want or need to go back there when this life is over. There’s something comforting about going home, wherever that home is. It’s important to respect their wishes, but it can sure wreak havoc on your time, your bank account, and your emotions if you’re trying to get from Point A to Point B in a short amount of time.

You will still have to deal with emotions when you’re dealing with the loss of someone you love, but if you get that emergency fund started, at least you have the option of being where you need to be.

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as WomenLovingLifeWorldwide.com.   Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter  @piercejam.

It Can Happen to You

Joyce Pierce April 23rd, 2009

You see it every day on the news. You get up and turn the tv on in the morning and learn that while you were sleeping, others were involved in accidents that caused their death. As one friend put it, “You watch the news and think that somehow your family is protected from these tragedies. After all, these people don’t live in your neighborhood. They come from a different social class. They were in the wrong place at the wrong time.” It wasn’t until his 21 year-old sister was killed in a skiing accident that he realized that all of his justifications were wrong. Your family most certainly can be affected.

Donna had asked her husband to write some things down for her before his flight to the Middle East several years ago. He scratched some things out on the back of an envelope and told her she was being silly. He returned from that trip, but a few short months later was killed by a drunk driver.

At least Donna had something to start with, but she wasn’t prepared for all of the questions the funeral home fired at her. She knew what bank accounts they had, and had helped with paying the bills over the years, but what about funeral arrangements? Did he want to be buried in Louisiana with his parents, or here in Texas where she and her family lived? Cremation or burial? What about the obituary for the newspaper? Did she have all of the accurate information they needed to write it?

Her emotions were raw as she tried to deal with the reality of it all. Was this all just a bad dream that would soon end? She just wanted to go home and grieve, but there were too many things to think about.

* How long will it take to settle the estate? * Will I have enough cash to live on until then? * Will the insurance come before they foreclose on the house? * Where is the real copy of the will? * How can I prove stock ownership? * Do I know about all bank accounts and insurance policies? * How do I collect social security? * Whose advice can I trust?

If you don’t know the answers to these questions, now is a good time for you to start thinking about them. What are some things you can do to be better prepared for these situations?

1. Talk to your spouse (and don’t forget your parents) and explain the importance of working together to put this information together now. Accidents aren’t something we schedule!

2. Gather important papers. Include birth certificates, pre-paid funeral arrangements, military records, current bank and credit card statements, wills, safe deposit information (bank, box number, authorized signers, contents), employment information – insurance, savings plans, retirement accounts, etc., savings account statements, stock certificates, loan agreements, automobile titles, health and life insurance.

3. Discuss the disposition of personal items. This will help avoid family feuds when it comes time to decide who should get grandfather’s watch or mother’s pearls.

4. Make copies of these documents and file the originals in a safe place. A fireproof safe at home is recommended so you’ll have access to them on the weekend. You might even consider scanning them and saving them to a CD.

5. Keep the information up to date. Decide to go through these records at least annually to make sure the information hasn’t changed. Take this opportunity to discard outdated information.

6. Make sure someone in your family, and a trusted family friend, knows where this information is stored so it can be retrieved at a moment’s notice. The fireproof box is a good place to keep it along with your original documents, but be sure to put it back each time you update the information.

You are doing your family a disservice if you don’t prepare this information for them while you’re able. It doesn’t make sense to provide for them throughout your life, only to leave them struggling when they need your guidance more than ever.

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as WomenLovingLifeWorldwide.com.   Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter  @piercejam.

How Much Do I Love Thee?

Joyce Pierce April 21st, 2009

February is the month when we typically look for ways to express our love to others. I can’t help but think of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s classic poem, “How Do I Love Thee?”

“How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.
I love thee to the level of every day’s
Most quiet need, by sun and candlelight.
I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;
I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.
I love thee with a passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith.
I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
With my lost saints, — I love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my life! — and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee better after death.”

While many of us know the first line of this poem,
how many of us have really read and thought about
the depths of her love expressed here?

I especially like the last line.  “I shall love thee better after death.”  As a Christian, I believe the love I have for my family is eternal. My mortal life will one day end but the love I have for them will live on forever.  Likewise, they will continue to love me, long after I’m gone, and one day there will be a joyful reunion on the other side.

There is nothing more important to us than our families and other loved ones.  We often take for granted that our spouses, children, or grandchildren will always be there for us.  While we naturally assume that our parents will die before we do,  that’s not always the case.  My father died before his parents, and my brother died before my mother.
The family foundation that we build our lives on can be changed in an instant.

We know that death is inevitable.  It will come to all of us.  We may not like to think about it but it’s true.  If we can just deal with the reality of it, there are some steps we can take
to make this transition easier for those we leave behind.

We can show our loved ones how much we love them by educating and preparing them.

Did you know that there are at least 100 things the survivor must do when death occurs?  It is so important to talk to your family now so they will not have the unnecessary burden of dealing with these things while experiencing the initial stages of grief.

Here are just a few things to consider:

Tell them where they’ll find your will.  If you don’t have one, now’s the time to have one drawn up.  It’s important to have a current will that’s authorized in the state in which you currently live.

Don’t hide any insurance policies from them.  If they don’t know you have them, they won’t know to make a claim.

Let them know who to notify at time of death.  You probably have friends they’re not
aware of.  Be sure they know how to find them.

Make sure they know if you’ve made arrangements for your own funeral.  It won’t help them any if you’ve kept this a secret.

Tell them where you want to be buried.  Do you want your final resting place to be “back home” or in the state where you currently reside?

Does your family know if you have chosen to be an organ donor?  This is something that needs to be known immediately.

Record this information and let them know where they’ll be able to find it when the time comes.  Don’t make them tear the house apart looking for it.  Don’t set them up for disagreeing over the options when emotions are already high.

In addition to helping ease the emotional burden on your family, think about the financial burden. Most people overspend on funerals because they have to make immediate decisions.  Do your own homework. Research your options before there’s
a need…and then write it all down for them.

Show them how much you love them by taking care of these matters now.  Don’t leave your loved ones guessing.

Joyce Moseley Pierce is a contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  She’s the creator of All They’ll Need to Know and owner of Emerson Publications.  She’s the Family Preparedness Expert for Ideamarketers.com as well as WomenLovingLifeWorldwide.com.   Visit www.emersonpublications.com or www.preparedineveryway.com to learn more.  Follow Joyce on Twitter  @piercejam.