• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

DFW Divorce Financial Analyst | Cathy Threadgill CDFA™

214.649.6733
Menu
  • About
  • CDFA™/Paralegal
    • CDFA™/Paralegal
    • Family Law Attorneys
    • Probate and Estate Attorneys
    • Clients
    • Close
  • News
    • Articles
    • Inspirational
    • Weekly Divorce Tips
    • Close
  • Resources
    • Resources
    • Book
    • Checklists and Forms
    • Close
  • Endorsements
  • FAQ’s
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for child

child

Beauty around me

Dear Lord, thank you for all the beauty around me.

Take a moment each and every day to appreciate the beauty that God has put in your life.  It can be as little as a butterfly sitting on a leaf to a winter snowfall.

The beauty around you can calm you if given the opportunity.  It can also give you time and conversation with your children.

Enjoy the beauty around you….

Time is what really matters

Time Has a wonderful way of showing us what really matters.

In the blink of an eye it will be next year.  The time that you miss with your children can never be reclaimed.  You can try, but you can never be at that soccer game you missed, you can never redo the birthday party you didn’t show up for.  Time is the most precious gift we are given and that we have to give.

Harry Chapin’s song Cats in a Cradel was set to music after his child was born; because that is when he realized how important time was with his child.

Jim Croce’s song Time in a Bottle  is all about wishing for more time but there never seems to be enough.

Weight the benefits of where you are putting your time.

Headed for Sunshine

Don’t confuse your path with your destination.  Just because it’s stormy now doesn’t mean you aren’t headed for sunshine.

The path that you are on today may not be your ultimate destination.  If your current path is ending a dysfunctional relationship that doesn’t mean you will be alone for ever.  It means that this current path is leading you through the storm towards the sunshine.  At the end of this path you will head towards the right into the sunshine.

Remember you must walk this path before you find your sunshine again.

See the Light Hear the Whisper

You may not always see the light but if you are quiet you will hear the whisper.

While you are going through trying time you may not be able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.  But, if you sit quietly by you will be able to her God’s whisper.  The whisper of your future.  The future in his timing.

Good Relationships

Good Relationships don’t just happen.  They take time, patience, and two people who truly want to be together.

If you are beating yourself up because of a failed relationship you must remember that it takes two people to make a relationship work.  If one or the other person doesn’t want to take the time or have the patience for the relationship it will never work; no matter what the other person is willing to do.

If their are children in this relationship take the time and have the patience with your children.  Show them that time and patience are important.

Create Drama…

People who create their own Drama deserve their own Karma….

Just because you don’t like what is happening in your life, at this moment, doesn’t mean you have a license to create Drama for others.  When you create Drama for others you deserve the Karma that comes into your life.

Father’s Day for Mom’s

Happy Father’s Day to all you single Moms’ who have unconditionally and lovingly played both roles for your children!

Some times a mom takes on the role of both mother and father.  Today we celebrate the father’s in our children’s lives and sometimes that person is also known as Mom.

Updating your Last Will and Testament

Your Last Will and Testament may be your final words to your friends and family.  It is the only way to insure that your wishes regarding your estate will be abide by.  The words and feeling that are in your Will today may not be how you feel in five, ten or twenty years, because your life changes, you as a person change and the people in your life change.

Usually while you are going through the divorce process, by law, you are not allowed to make any changes to your Last Will and Testament.  Unfortunately when the divorce process is completed most individuals do not immediately have their attorney prepare a new will.  If you do not immediately proceed with making changes to your Last Will and Testament you may never have the opportunity to make your wishes known or worse yet you may forget about the Will all together and then 20 years later your family has to deal with your oversight.

Case In Point:  These are true facts and the gentleman involved in this scenario we are going to call George.

George gets married at the age of 17 and had two children.  Ten years later he divorces Last Will and Testament 2their mother and then re-marries.   He then divorces that wife and re-marries again.  Wife #3 blesses George with another child.  After the birth, Wife #3 insists that they have Last Will and Testaments prepared to make sure that their child will be taken care of in the event that anything should happen to either of them.  George tells Wife #3 to have an attorney draw up the wills and he will sign it, because at the time, he agrees with Wife #3 about the need for a Will.  Wife #3 contacts her attorney and has the Wills drawn up.  It is unsure as to how closely George reviewed his Will prior to signing, but sign he did.

After approximately eight years of marriage, George and Wife #3 go through a very ugly divorce.  By the time of the divorce George had forgotten that he had signed a Will, and being a bigger than life individual never acknowledges his mortality.

After divorcing Wife #3, George goes on his merry way and never thinks about the Will he signed.  During the next fifteen years he has a couple of long term relationships, his relationship with his two older children heals its self and his relationship with his third child remains intact.  What happens next is heart breaking.

You see, George becomes very ill and was hospitalized.  When he was first admitted into the hospital it didn’t look good, then he started to recover, then another set back, then another sign of recovery.  This went on for 90 days.   During this time his oldest child was handling all the medical issues, communicated with the doctors and would make all necessary arrangement and keeps her siblings and other family members abreast of his condition.  His middle child would see him on an ongoing bases traveling the 100 miles round trip as often as his work and family life would allow.  His youngest child for the first two weeks would stop by for a couple of minutes every couple of days and then the visits became less and less, claiming that she does not have child care for her own child and could not afford the gas and parking fees.  During the last weeks of George’s life his youngest child does not visit at all.

Because of George’s condition his eldest child is appointed his Guardian.  After being appointed Guardian she finds out that her younger sister had withdrawn and spent more than half of all of the cash in George’s bank accounts.  Needless to say these actions caused concerns within the family, concern regarding how is George going to be able to take care of expenses once he is released from the hospital.  Instead of causing immediate family drama the eldest child, being more concerned with her father’s health, for the next couple of weeks works with what she has left.  She inventories his assets, makes arrangement to store his household items and vehicles, pays bills, makes living arrangements for George, in other words spends hours every day taking care of her dad.  Then George takes a turn for the worse and dies.

FuneralUpon his death, Wife #3, mother of George’s youngest child produces the Will that George signed some 20 years ago, leaving everything to his third child and instructing the Courts that his other two children “shall be deemed to have predeceased me”.  The actions of Wife #3 and her daughter were bad enough but the words written in George’s Last Will and Testament “shall be deemed to have predeceased me” cut to the heart and sole of his older two children.

Everyone who knew George was aware of his love for all of his children, he had pictures of them in his office, home and even in his car.  He spoke about them often and during his illness he told his children and others how wonderful they were and how much he loved them.  George didn’t take the time, when he had it, to review and update his Last Will and Testament. George’s older children will always remember his words, while he was in his hospital bed but they will also remember seeing the words “shall be deemed to have predecease me” written in his will.

The moral of this true account is “take the time to review and update your will immediately after your divorce is final and then review it every couple of years after that”. Your life changes and so should your Last Will and Testament.

sidebar

Blog Sidebar

Cathy Threadgill, CDFA™

DFW Divorce Finances
214.649.6733

If you have questions after reading any of the articles, tips, blog posts or pages, please call or contact Cathy A. Threadgill, CDFA™. She will be able to help you with your specific question or situation.

All pages, posts, articles and blog posts are for informational purposes only they do not constitute legal advice. If you require legal advice, please contact a lawyer licensed in your state. The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author, who is not an attorney.

July 4th

Read On >

Mother’s Day

Read On >

Is it alright for my Ex to claim the EITC when the children live with me?

Per the IRS your Ex probably is not properly claiming the EITC (Earned Income Tax Credit). If Read On >

Endorsements

Cathy provided top quality accounting work and paralegal work on a lawsuit I was prosecuting and defending.  I will be using Cathy’s services in the future. February 14, 2012
Shep Sands Litigation and Trial AttorneyThe Ashmore Law Firm, P.C. Dallas, TX
Cathy Threadgill and I have worked on many different projects over the last decade. Her professionalism, knowledge and experience in accounting and family law are invaluable. Her ability to review documents, compile research and prepare excel schedules, along with her knowledge of QuickBooks are without a doubt assets that I will continue to utilize.
Elizabeth SchruppOwner, Schrupp, CPADallas, TX
Cathy is a detail-oriented worker that aggressively approaches tasks assigned her.
Tracey GajakSullivan & Cook, LLC Attorneys at LawIrving, TX
I’ve know Cathy for 15 years and she has always been dedicated and diligent in her work ethics and habits.
George Burgess, CPAOwner, Burgess Company, PCBurgess Company, PCDallas, TX

Endorsements

Professionalism, Knowledge and Experience: Accounting and Family Law
Cathy Threadgill and I have worked on many different projects over the last decade. Her professional… Read more
Elizabeth SchruppOwner, Schrupp, CPADallas, TX
Top Quality Accounting and Paralegal Work
Cathy provided top quality accounting work and paralegal work on a lawsuit I was prosecuting and def… Read more
Shep Sands Litigation and Trial AttorneyThe Ashmore Law Firm, P.C. Dallas, TX
Detail-oriented, Aggressively Approaching Tasks
Cathy is a detail-oriented worker that aggressively approaches tasks assigned her.
Tracey GajakSullivan & Cook, LLC Attorneys at LawIrving, TX
Dedicated and Diligent
I’ve know Cathy for 15 years and she has always been dedicated and diligent in her work ethics and… Read more
George Burgess, CPAOwner, Burgess Company, PCBurgess Company, PCDallas, TX

Contact Cathy Threadgill

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Disclaimer: If you have questions after reading any of the articles, tips, blog posts or pages, please call or contact Cathy A. Threadgill, CDFA™. She will be able to help you with your specific question or situation.

All pages, posts, articles and blog posts are for informational purposes only; they do not constitute legal advice. If you require legal advice, please contact a lawyer licensed in your state. The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author, who is not an attorney.



© 2019 Cathy Threadgill CDFA™
All Rights Reserved
Website by DFW Business Websites