• Should I Hire A Financial Advisor

    From Beaver Fever@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 26 10:53:17 2023
    I have a huge chunkochange just sitting in my Bank Of America account and I don't really understand what I am reading.

    Actually 2022 mighta been my roughest year since 2000-ish and I had a hard time reading anything

    My (former) business associate recommended someone like a year ago

    HELP

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  • From Dim Witte@21:1/5 to Beaver Fever on Fri Jan 27 12:03:39 2023
    On Thursday, January 26, 2023 at 9:53:19 AM UTC-9, Beaver Fever wrote:
    I have a huge chunkochange just sitting in my Bank Of America account and I don't really understand what I am reading.

    Actually 2022 mighta been my roughest year since 2000-ish and I had a hard time reading anything

    My (former) business associate recommended someone like a year ago

    HELP

    IF you have a relative that you trust enough to be an executor of your will, that's probably the best. Problem is relatives who distrust each other and want to get their share. Lucky if you have family with other needy members like yourself, who will "
    take you in" in some fashion. I recently had to deny a so-called nephew who tried to identified as such, because I remember too well his parents shiftiness. Had no memory of him. See this acted out on TV series about "Hoarders."

    An attorney can probably write you up some legal documents that specify how assets can be used, probably requiring who your trust director is.

    Must be lots of organizations, church and other, who are able to advise on your predicament. When I search for such on internet, I find: some that are providing basic care for the needy, and some that are costly. Maybe good to approach AARP and local
    social services for free advice about assisted living, etc..

    I would be considering getting either full-time live-in aide or part-time assistance at first. Where I live, which is in a government-assisted apartment complex, paying only 30% of income, we have a Social Services Director who coordinates our needs and
    available services. Through her, we can arrange for regular help, but not live-in arrangements.

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  • From gggg gggg@21:1/5 to Beaver Fever on Fri Jan 27 17:39:44 2023
    On Thursday, January 26, 2023 at 10:53:19 AM UTC-8, Beaver Fever wrote:
    I have a huge chunkochange just sitting in my Bank Of America account and I don't really understand what I am reading.

    Actually 2022 mighta been my roughest year since 2000-ish and I had a hard time reading anything

    My (former) business associate recommended someone like a year ago

    HELP

    https://groups.google.com/u/1/g/misc.consumers.frugal-living/c/8deyNg9rP5g/m/__m8I0kZAAAJ

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  • From Beaver Fever@21:1/5 to daka...@gmail.com on Sat Jan 28 11:22:01 2023
    On Friday, January 27, 2023 at 12:03:41 PM UTC-8, daka...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Thursday, January 26, 2023 at 9:53:19 AM UTC-9, Beaver Fever wrote:
    I have a huge chunkochange just sitting in my Bank Of America account and I don't really understand what I am reading.

    Actually 2022 mighta been my roughest year since 2000-ish and I had a hard time reading anything

    My (former) business associate recommended someone like a year ago

    HELP
    IF you have a relative that you trust enough to be an executor of your will, that's probably the best. Problem is relatives who distrust each other and want to get their share. Lucky if you have family with other needy members like yourself, who will "
    take you in" in some fashion. I recently had to deny a so-called nephew who tried to identified as such, because I remember too well his parents shiftiness. Had no memory of him. See this acted out on TV series about "Hoarders."

    An attorney can probably write you up some legal documents that specify how assets can be used, probably requiring who your trust director is.

    Must be lots of organizations, church and other, who are able to advise on your predicament. When I search for such on internet, I find: some that are providing basic care for the needy, and some that are costly. Maybe good to approach AARP and local
    social services for free advice about assisted living, etc..

    I would be considering getting either full-time live-in aide or part-time assistance at first. Where I live, which is in a government-assisted apartment complex, paying only 30% of income, we have a Social Services Director who coordinates our needs
    and available services. Through her, we can arrange for regular help, but not live-in arrangements.


    None of this has the least bit of relevance to me or what was posted here

    though my roommate was asked and refused

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  • From Bob F@21:1/5 to Beaver Fever on Sat Jan 28 13:51:11 2023
    On 1/28/2023 11:22 AM, Beaver Fever wrote:
    On Friday, January 27, 2023 at 12:03:41 PM UTC-8, daka...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Thursday, January 26, 2023 at 9:53:19 AM UTC-9, Beaver Fever wrote:
    I have a huge chunkochange just sitting in my Bank Of America account and I don't really understand what I am reading.

    Actually 2022 mighta been my roughest year since 2000-ish and I had a hard time reading anything

    My (former) business associate recommended someone like a year ago

    HELP
    IF you have a relative that you trust enough to be an executor of your will, that's probably the best. Problem is relatives who distrust each other and want to get their share. Lucky if you have family with other needy members like yourself, who will "
    take you in" in some fashion. I recently had to deny a so-called nephew who tried to identified as such, because I remember too well his parents shiftiness. Had no memory of him. See this acted out on TV series about "Hoarders."

    An attorney can probably write you up some legal documents that specify how assets can be used, probably requiring who your trust director is.

    Must be lots of organizations, church and other, who are able to advise on your predicament. When I search for such on internet, I find: some that are providing basic care for the needy, and some that are costly. Maybe good to approach AARP and local
    social services for free advice about assisted living, etc..

    I would be considering getting either full-time live-in aide or part-time assistance at first. Where I live, which is in a government-assisted apartment complex, paying only 30% of income, we have a Social Services Director who coordinates our needs
    and available services. Through her, we can arrange for regular help, but not live-in arrangements.


    None of this has the least bit of relevance to me or what was posted here

    Very true.


    though my roommate was asked and refused


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dim Witte@21:1/5 to Beaver Fever on Sat Jan 28 13:50:54 2023
    On Saturday, January 28, 2023 at 10:22:03 AM UTC-9, Beaver Fever wrote:
    On Friday, January 27, 2023 at 12:03:41 PM UTC-8, daka...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Thursday, January 26, 2023 at 9:53:19 AM UTC-9, Beaver Fever wrote:
    I have a huge chunkochange just sitting in my Bank Of America account and I don't really understand what I am reading.

    Actually 2022 mighta been my roughest year since 2000-ish and I had a hard time reading anything

    My (former) business associate recommended someone like a year ago

    HELP
    IF you have a relative that you trust enough to be an executor of your will, that's probably the best. Problem is relatives who distrust each other and want to get their share. Lucky if you have family with other needy members like yourself, who will
    "take you in" in some fashion. I recently had to deny a so-called nephew who tried to identified as such, because I remember too well his parents shiftiness. Had no memory of him. See this acted out on TV series about "Hoarders."

    An attorney can probably write you up some legal documents that specify how assets can be used, probably requiring who your trust director is.

    Must be lots of organizations, church and other, who are able to advise on your predicament. When I search for such on internet, I find: some that are providing basic care for the needy, and some that are costly. Maybe good to approach AARP and local
    social services for free advice about assisted living, etc..

    I would be considering getting either full-time live-in aide or part-time assistance at first. Where I live, which is in a government-assisted apartment complex, paying only 30% of income, we have a Social Services Director who coordinates our needs
    and available services. Through her, we can arrange for regular help, but not live-in arrangements.
    None of this has the least bit of relevance to me or what was posted here

    though my roommate was asked and refused

    You say you have "a huge chunk of money" as a resource, so maybe you pay someone to be your "assisted-living" roommate, like a relative that is also willing to help, or pay another family to accommodate you?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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