I recently met with a couple from Manhattan who had done what they thought was right. Twenty years ago, they hired a lawyer to draft their wills. They signed them, filed them away, and felt secure. But over those two decades, their lives changed entirely. They started a successful business, bought a vacation home, and their children, once toddlers, were now adults with families of their own. Their original wills, however, remained unchanged—a fossilized snapshot of a life they no longer lived. The plan they were relying on would have sent their business into a court-supervised fire sale and treated their adult children like minors.
This is a common story. Many people view estate planning as a one-time task to be checked off a list. In my practice, I see it differently. It is not about documents; it is about stewardship. It is an ongoing, deliberate process of ensuring that what you’ve built continues to serve the people you love in the way you intend. This process doesn’t have to be complicated, but it does require a clear framework.
Step 1: The Inventory—Clarity Before Action
Before we ever discuss a trust or a will, the first step is always a candid inventory. This is more than just a balance sheet. It’s a map of your life’s assets, obligations, and relationships. What do you own? Where is it located? Who has access?
We start with the tangible: real estate, bank accounts, investment portfolios. But we go deeper. We account for business interests, life insurance policies, retirement accounts, and even digital assets. For each asset, we ask a critical question: how is it titled? Is it in your name alone, held jointly, or in a trust? The answer determines whether it will pass through your will or outside of it.
Equally important is clarifying your beneficiaries. People are often surprised to learn that the beneficiary designation on a 401(k) or life insurance policy will almost always override whatever your will says. I’ve seen estates where a will leaves everything to a current spouse, but an old 401(k) from a previous job still names an ex-spouse as the beneficiary. That is a painful, and entirely avoidable, conflict for a family to endure. A thorough inventory brings these potential conflicts to light so we can align every asset with your true intentions.
Step 2: The Blueprint—Your Will and Trusts
Once we have a clear map of your assets, we can design the blueprint for their stewardship. This is where legal documents like wills and trusts come into play. They are the tools, not the goal.
A Last Will and Testament is the foundational document. It is your direct instruction to the Surrogate’s Court on three key points: who will be your executor, who will inherit your probate assets, and who should be the guardian of any minor children. In New York, a will isn’t valid unless it meets the strict formal requirements of Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §3-2.1, including being signed in the presence of two witnesses. A small mistake in this ceremony can invalidate the entire document, leaving the state to make decisions for you.
For many of my clients, especially those with significant assets or complex family dynamics, a will alone is insufficient. We often use trusts to achieve more specific goals. A Revocable Living Trust, for example, allows your assets to be managed without interruption by a successor trustee if you become incapacitated and to be distributed to your heirs without the delay and expense of the probate process. Other trusts can be designed to protect assets for a child with special needs, minimize estate taxes, or manage a family business across generations.
The goal is to create a blueprint that is both resilient and reflective of your values. It’s your voice, codified into a legal structure that can withstand scrutiny and effectively guide your family.
Step 3: The Contingency Plan—Preparing for Incapacity
An estate plan that only addresses death is incomplete. A significant part of our work focuses on planning for incapacity—the possibility that you might one day be unable to make your own financial or medical decisions. Without a plan, your family’s only option is to petition a court for guardianship, a public, costly, and often emotionally draining process.
We proactively prevent this with two key documents.
First, a Durable Power of Attorney allows you to appoint a trusted agent to manage your financial affairs. This person—your fiduciary—can pay bills, manage investments, and handle property matters on your behalf. It is a grant of immense authority, and selecting the right agent is a critical decision.
Second, a Health Care Proxy lets you name an agent to make medical decisions for you if you cannot communicate them yourself. Paired with a Living Will, which outlines your wishes regarding end-of-life care, this document ensures your medical preferences are honored and removes an agonizing burden of guesswork from your loved ones during a crisis.
These are not documents about dying. They are about living with dignity and control, no matter what happens.
Stewardship. That’s the work. It’s not about filling out forms; it’s about building a thoughtful, intentional plan that protects you during your life and provides for your family long after. It’s a process that evolves as your life does, ensuring your legacy is one of clarity and care, not confusion.
Before you draft a single document, the first step is always clarity. We guide clients through a Legacy and Asset Inventory to build a complete picture of their financial and family life. If you’re ready to begin, schedule a preliminary call with our team to discuss how this foundational process works.




