Kristen J. Ishihara and Christopher A. Parker discuss ways you can protect your loved ones and their future.
Planning an estate without kids? It’s about choosing trusted healthcare and financial agents, defining beneficiaries, and ensuring your wishes are legally covered.
Explore common scams targeting seniors—phone, tech threats and more—with tips from Chris & Kristen to spot red flags and protect yourself or loved ones.
Congrats, grads! When your child turns 18, they’ll need key legal docs—like power of attorney, healthcare proxy, and HIPAA release—so parents can help if needed.
Divorce impacts your estate plan more than you think. Learn what to update—wills, powers of attorney, beneficiaries—to protect your assets and ensure your wishes are honored at every stage.
Adoption affects estate planning more than most realize. Whether you adopt a child or gave one up, your legal documents must reflect your true family situation to avoid unintended outcomes.
In Texas, you have no legal obligation to leave your child anything in your will not even a dollar. You have the freedom to leave your assets to whomever you choose with no requirement for equal share