I once met with a family whose father was in an ICU bed at a Brooklyn hospital, unable to speak for himself after a sudden aneurysm. The doctors needed a decision on a risky procedure, and they asked the family a simple question: “Who has the authority to speak for him?” The three adult children looked at each other in silence. They had no idea. He had a will for his assets, but he had never prepared for a moment like this—a moment of profound vulnerability while he was still alive.
This is a scene we see too often. People plan for what happens after they die but neglect to plan for being unable to manage their own affairs. This is where two of the most critical documents in any estate plan are essential: the Living Will and the Power of Attorney. They are not the same, and in New York, understanding the distinction is vital.
The Living Will: Your Voice on Paper
A living will is a directive to your doctors. It is a formal, written statement detailing the types of life-sustaining medical care you would or would not want if you become terminally ill, permanently unconscious, or otherwise unable to communicate your own decisions. It answers questions like:
- Do you want to be kept alive by a ventilator?
- Do you consent to artificial nutrition and hydration?
- Do you want CPR administered if your heart stops?
Think of it as your script for the final act, written in advance with a clear mind. It removes an impossible burden from your family, who would otherwise be forced to guess at your wishes during a time of immense stress. A living will, however, is only a set of instructions. It has no power on its own. It needs a person to present it and ensure it is followed.
The Power of Attorney and Health Care Proxy: Your Appointed Steward
While a living will states your wishes, other documents appoint a person to act on your behalf. In New York, we separate these duties into two documents for clarity and legal precision.
First is the Health Care Proxy. This legal instrument lets you appoint someone you trust—your agent—to make healthcare decisions for you when you cannot. This is the person who will hand your living will to the doctors and advocate for the choices you’ve made. Your agent becomes your voice, empowered to consent to or refuse medical treatment based on the guidance you provided.
Second is the Durable Power of Attorney. This document is for your financial life. Your agent under a Power of Attorney can pay your bills, manage your investments, file your taxes, and handle your property. The word “durable” is key—it means the document remains effective even if you become incapacitated. Without it, your finances could be frozen, leaving your family unable to pay the mortgage or the hospital bills while you are being cared for.
The Alternative: An Article 81 Guardianship Proceeding
What happens if you have neither a Health Care Proxy nor a Durable Power of Attorney? Your family’s only option is to go to court and petition for guardianship. This process, governed by Article 81 of the New York Mental Hygiene Law, is the opposite of a deliberate, private plan.
A guardianship proceeding is public. It is expensive. It is time-consuming. A judge—not you—will decide who should manage your personal and financial affairs. The court may appoint a family member, or it may appoint a stranger. Your most personal medical and financial details become part of a public record. It is a complete loss of control, inflicted at the worst possible time.
These documents—the living will, the health care proxy, the durable power of attorney—are not about paperwork. They are about maintaining your dignity and autonomy. They are about protecting your family from court battles and agonizing decisions. Stewardship. This is the core of our work: creating a prudent, intentional plan that provides for you and your family during life’s most difficult contingencies.
If you have these documents, review them every few years. If you do not, the time to act is now. When my firm drafts these advance directives, we don’t just fill out forms; we facilitate a deliberate conversation about your values. To begin that conversation, I invite you to schedule a consultation to establish or review your own advance directives.




