Living Wills for Young Adults & Their Parents
A gift you and your parents/kids can give one another
A Living Will, more formally known as a Health Care Proxy and Advanced Directives for Healthcare, is not actually a will at all. An actual will (“Last Will and Testament”) becomes effective when you die, and primarily gives your instructions as to what is to happen to your property after you die. A living will is used while you are still alive, and gives directions as to how (and by whom) you would like your medical care to be handled, if you are unable to make your own medical decisions, and what kinds of interventions, if any, you would want in an end-of-life situation.
All of which sounds rather grim, and not likely to be on the gift-wish list of young adults and their parents. From my own experience, having been through the deaths of 4 grandparents, two parents-in-law, and a parent, I feel that a living will is a gift that a person gives to their loved ones, who will have to make medical decisions for them if they are severely ill or injured. It can be devastating to operate without these kinds of instructions when you need to make life or death decisions for a loved one.
I find that people’s feelings about end of life decisions fall along a spectrum, from the “keep me alive if there’s any glimmer of hope” at one end, to the “aid me in having a peaceful and pain-free death” at the other.
Do we know how our loved ones feel about these issues, and what they would want to have happen in an end-of-life situation? What if a young adult, just turned 18, is in a catastrophic accident? Because an 18 year old has reached their majority, parents will not automatically be permitted to direct medical decisions if the young adult is unconscious or otherwise unable to make their own decisions. On the other hand, once a young adult turns 18, they might be called on to make medical decisions for their parents if the parents are unconscious or incapacitated. A living will prepares for these situations, and gives loved ones guidance in a moment of crisis. While I offer this advice with a heaping measure of “Gods and the fates forbid,” and hope no young adult or parents of a young adult will need to make use of a living will for many years to come, being prepared brings peace of mind.
Parents can give peace of mind to their young adults by making their own living wills, and young adults can give a gift peace of mind to their parents the same way. New graduation/coming of age gift idea? At Oltman Law & Mediation we are happy to help. Please give us a call at (609) 924-2044.
© C. Megan Oltman, Esq. 3/21/19
Please note that blog posts do not constitute legal advice, but are intended for informational purposes only. They cannot substitute for an in-person consultation with a lawyer. Your use of this site does not create an attorney client relationship.
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