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Thursday, 25 April 2013
Wednesday, 17 April 2013
THE TRAPPINGS OF LIFE:
I have been an auction
fan most of my life. As a child, I lived with my family in a new subdivision
that backed on to a hayfield where outdoor auctions were held every other
Saturday, rain or shine. Not wishing to date myself, I will reveal that this took place
during the time when a child of eight or nine could wander independently among the old tables, wobbly chairs, commode sets, and iron bedsteads; could
reach out and touch a ragged quilt or thumb through a photo album filled with
brown and grey images of frowning and stern dead relatives of someone or other. (Atkinson, 2012)
Although the physical labour of disposing of personal items like
clothes, food, and medications has been completed, the task of formally
appraising the contents of Emily’s home and subsequently selling every item
begins. This chapter details that process and illustrates the challenges
inherent in liquidating the possessions of a consummate collector. Emily and
Rob went overboard with accumulating items they thought would eventually
appreciate in value. The executrix is left with a chore of turning these items
into cash for the estate, as the ultimate goal is to pay the beneficiaries the
monies they have been promised. The liquidation of household items by an executor
is a common occurrence in estate management. The writer takes the opportunity
to share this albeit extreme circumstance with the reader.
Wednesday, 3 April 2013
THE GUN:
In my somewhat biased opinion, guns are a curse. The world
would be a better place without any guns at all. The more control and
regulation the better. I find bullets, and lots of them, in Emily’s bedside
tables - enough to fill a small grocery bag. We have the bullets. Now, where in
God’s name, is the gun (or guns)?
(Atkinson, 2012)
Chapter
nine is all about the search for, and disposition of, a gun the executrix
has no idea even existed prior to the death of her friend. Her reaction, her
decisions regarding the gun, and her tenacity in ensuring the process is
carried out to her satisfaction all stem from a personal injury incident years
before. The story of the gun serves to illustrate how the emotions and
experience of an executor can become pivotal in estate decisions made along
the way.
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