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What’s the one item that you would leave behind
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:39 am
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:39 am
That would be of memory to your family? This guys dad just passed and gave him his 1950s Rolex and thought that was super cool way to remember your dad as you go on. What do you remember your parents with?
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:40 am to fareplay
I plan to leave my family my corpse.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:40 am to fareplay
quote:Budweiser
What do you remember your parents with?
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:41 am to GreenRockTiger
Your dad was a trans?
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:42 am to fareplay
quote:he was an Aggie
Your dad was a trans?
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:44 am to Deep Purple Haze
maybe my mom drinks Bud
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:45 am to fareplay
A roll of Camouflage Grizzly Wintergreen
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:45 am to GreenRockTiger
quote:
Your dad was a trans?
he was an Aggie
GRT with the kill shot
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:49 am to fareplay
Leave my kids with perfect credit and no student loans.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:55 am to fareplay
My 1943 original Picasso painting
Posted on 4/23/24 at 11:59 am to fareplay
I inherited my Father's old Toyota station
wagon, from before the days when Toyota made infallible vehicles. It was tan. It smelled of his pipe smoke. That was too much memory and too sad. I went to an auto paint place, told them the problem, asked for their cheapest solution.
Their paint was set up to do pick up truck blue. So the exterior and limited parts of the interior because pick up truck blue and that killed most of pipe smoke scent as well.
The good memories of them and my grandparents include my Granny's rocking chair, her ancient bread knife, her bread board, and my Grandfather's portrait. From them and my parents, every dividend check from interhited stocks four times a year. And a lot of my solid wood furniture.
wagon, from before the days when Toyota made infallible vehicles. It was tan. It smelled of his pipe smoke. That was too much memory and too sad. I went to an auto paint place, told them the problem, asked for their cheapest solution.
Their paint was set up to do pick up truck blue. So the exterior and limited parts of the interior because pick up truck blue and that killed most of pipe smoke scent as well.
The good memories of them and my grandparents include my Granny's rocking chair, her ancient bread knife, her bread board, and my Grandfather's portrait. From them and my parents, every dividend check from interhited stocks four times a year. And a lot of my solid wood furniture.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 12:01 pm to fareplay
Land. Managed land.
My cousin is about to go through the problem alot of Gen X and millennials are going/ gone through, and that's the problem of boomers building multi-million dollar mansions in the middle of nowhere with no market to meet the demand of what it's worth. It's 5 million dollar custom home sitting on a lake and 300 manicured, managed pasture acres in Mississippi, while they live in New Mexico. It's going to be a pain in the arse to upkeep and maintain while trying to find the right buyer for a price that's fair to him, but realistic to the market.
It'd have been far better to not have that house on it when an heir has to deal with it. Leave them acreage that can be leased for hunting, cut for hay, managed for timber, wrp, crp, etc., and they can live where ever they want while keeping the legacy you built for them and having the greatest asset that one can hold: dirt.
My cousin is about to go through the problem alot of Gen X and millennials are going/ gone through, and that's the problem of boomers building multi-million dollar mansions in the middle of nowhere with no market to meet the demand of what it's worth. It's 5 million dollar custom home sitting on a lake and 300 manicured, managed pasture acres in Mississippi, while they live in New Mexico. It's going to be a pain in the arse to upkeep and maintain while trying to find the right buyer for a price that's fair to him, but realistic to the market.
It'd have been far better to not have that house on it when an heir has to deal with it. Leave them acreage that can be leased for hunting, cut for hay, managed for timber, wrp, crp, etc., and they can live where ever they want while keeping the legacy you built for them and having the greatest asset that one can hold: dirt.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 12:04 pm to fareplay
A one page memory I wrote down a long time ago.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 12:27 pm to fareplay
quote:
What do you remember your parents with?
Every time I shove another anti-depressant down my throat I remember him.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 12:31 pm to fareplay
Dad’s old Timex watches, power tools and firearms.
My mom’s kitchen stuff that my wife always uses.
My mom’s kitchen stuff that my wife always uses.
Posted on 4/23/24 at 12:32 pm to mudshuvl05
quote:
It's 5 million dollar custom home sitting on a lake and 300 manicured, managed pasture acres in Mississippi
My parents left something similar, but my brothers and I are currently working on making it a profitable cattle farm. We don’t ever plan on selling it, especially with the direction this country is going. Having land that can feed you is going to be one of the more invaluable things an American can have over the next couple of decades
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