He had a will. He thought he was covered.
Then he had a stroke. He survived, but he could no longer speak for himself or manage his own affairs.
His wife went to the bank to handle the mortgage and was turned away. The accounts were in his name, and she had no legal authority to act for him. The will did not help, because a will only speaks after death.
To get the authority she needed, she had to ask a Georgia court to appoint her as his guardian and conservator. It was expensive, slow, and public. All of it could have been avoided with two documents he never signed.
Estate planning tends to focus on what happens after you die. But there is a stretch of life that planning often forgets. The time when you are still here and simply cannot make decisions for yourself.
Illness, injury, or cognitive decline can take away your ability to sign, to speak, or to manage money long before they take your life.
A will does nothing during that time. Without the right documents, your family is left with one option, and it is the worst one. Court.
A durable financial power of attorney lets someone you trust manage your money, pay your bills, and handle your accounts if you cannot.
A healthcare directive, sometimes called an advance directive, lets someone make medical decisions on your behalf and records your own wishes about your care.
Together, these two documents do something quiet and powerful. They keep the decisions about your life inside your family instead of inside a courtroom.
Families assume a spouse or an adult child can simply step in. In Georgia, they cannot, not without legal authority.
Banks, hospitals, and financial institutions are not permitted to take direction from someone who has no documented authority, even a spouse. The alternative is guardianship and conservatorship, a court process that costs money, takes time, and strips a family of privacy and control at the exact moment they are already overwhelmed.
Here is the good news. A power of attorney and a healthcare directive are not complicated, and a well built estate plan does not leave them out.
A complete trust plan with us includes both. Every trust we build comes with a financial power of attorney, a medical power of attorney, and a pour over will, so the documents that protect you while you are living are in place alongside the trust that protects your family after you are gone.
The plans that leave the gap open are usually the partial ones. A will downloaded online. A single document signed years ago and never revisited. A plan that covers what happens after death but never the years before it. If your estate plan came from anywhere other than a full planning conversation, it is worth confirming these documents are part of it.
The best time to put these in place is while you are healthy and no one needs them yet. We can help you make sure your plan covers not only what happens after you are gone, but what happens if you are still here and unable to speak for yourself.
Speak With Our Team: https://cpgga.com/contact
June 15, 2026
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