SereneAmbition
Click to view larger image Click to view larger image Click to view larger image
SereneAmbition
Feb 2012
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
     
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
     
             

Ethical Will or Intergen Conversation?

Tuesday Jan 29 2008

By Shae Hadden | Bio
I was reading an article about ethical wills recently that got me wondering about what kind of legacy I might leave behind if I were to die tomorrow. This type of ‘leave behind’ document—like diaries, journals, books, letters and photo albums—are usually loving prepared over the course of several years. Nowadays, we also have innumerable opportunities to record our lives and thoughts online to share with friends and family. So why bother going to the trouble of preparing an ethical will in addition to a legal will?

According to the article, an ethical will offers us an opportunity to communicate with loved ones on paper. We can share things like:
  • Our values
  • Our life history
  • Our regrets and our gratitude
  • The lessons we’ve learned
  • Our hopes for the future
It saddens me to think of these being communicated in a will. True, sharing lessons learned in a document as one approaches death or as one’s last words after death is better than not communicating them at all.

But I see more value if we can use the document as a starting point for conversation with younger family members and friends while we are alive and well—then we can be sure what we’re sharing is clearly understood and ‘gotten’ by others. By being in conversation, we not only get to share who we are, but we also offer people opportunities to ask questions of us, to clarify and expand on our wisdom, and to use the best of what we have to offer now (instead of waiting until later).

I don't have time to sit down and write an ethical will right now. So I ask, “Why hold back from sharing myself now in every conversation I'm in?” I have no answer. Do you?

Written by eldering at Wisdom in Action

Tagged with: conversation ethical_will future wisdom

Comments:

Post a Comment:
Comments are closed for this entry.
Font size
SereneAmbition

Search Blog

SereneAmbition
SereneAmbition

Email Subscription

SereneAmbition