Leaving a Financial Legacy to Your Great Grandchildren
Children are Special... Especially when it comes
to Life Insurance. Children are expected to be on the planet for a long time
(0-100+ years, according to the new Mortality Tables), so their life insurance
rates are less expensive than an adult or even a teen! Once a child passes the
age of 14, they fall into a different pricing category. It's logical. When was
the last time you had one of your teenagers plop on your lap and tell you they
love you?
Life becomes more dangerous for teens after the
milestone year. They are no longer considered cute and cuddly by the insurance industry,
and subsequently cost a few pennies more to insure than your toddler. (But
teens still get a better rate than you or I.)
But to make a short story long, I give you a
sample illustration of the power of youth: "The Merry Child Story"
This is Merry Child. She is only 2 years old.
Her parents want her to have a great life when they are no longer around to
take care of her. (The Childs plan to move to Venezuela when they retire.) They
have opted to insure their precious little bundle of joy for $500,000.50 (the
50¢ is to prevent having more insurance on Merry than on themselves, but sorry,
my illustration software rounded the 50¢ up to $1.00 anyway, so Merry has the
same amount as her folks).
Since I am their agent, and did not get this
same financial opportunity from my parents when I was a toddling agent, I
suggested that the Childs sink their hard-earned Benjamins into a Flexible
Premium Universal Life Insurance Plan, like their own. (Try saying that one ten
(10) times!) They will pay a $437.50 quarterly premium, which is slightly less
than the cost of 20 pounds of Starbuck's® Black Apron Exclusive® Costa Rica
Whole Bean Roast, La Candelilla Estate Coffee®. (Try saying that once!)
At age 18, Merry is guaranteed to have a college
fund of $20,710.00 (possibly $27,614.00, based on current interest rate) and
a death benefit of $500,001.00. After four (4) or five (5) years of higher
learning, Merry will get a super job in Business and begin to repay the loan
she borrowed from her Flexible Premium Universal Life Insurance Plan, with a
little help from good old Mom and Dad.
With ten years of rigorous ladder climbing under
her belt (and at the tender age of 33), Merry gives in to her fiancé's
proposition of marriage and embarks on her next wonderful adventure with her
new husband Joselph Manger (pronounced: Yoself). Her cash value is now a
guaranteed $49,826.00 (possibly $90,572.00, based on current interest rate),
and a death benefit of $500,001.00.
Merry and Joselph buy a home and start working
on a family of their own. They decide to follow in the footsteps of Merry's
parents, the Childs, and have only one little bundle of... You know. By the
time their new son, Michael, is a toddler, Merry is 36 years old. Her Flexible
Premium Universal Life Insurance Plan cash value is worth $56,647.00 to
$110,159.00 (depending on guaranteed or current interest rate), and she has a
long-standing death benefit of $500,001.00. She decides to purchase a similar
plan for Michael. (Don't worry, we won't get into that.)
Seeing that their daughter Merry is in the safe
and loving hands of Joselph, the Child's, who are now retired, have opted for
Life Settlement. They cash in their own $500,001.00 Flexible Premium Universal
Life Insurance Plan for a measly $250,000.00, and move to Venezuela. Their
$250,000.00 becomes $ 536,150,000.00 when converted to the Venezuelan Bolivar
(VEB). Though their Español is really not that good, they live happily ever
after, in the lap of Venezuelan luxury.
Another 29 years whisk by. Michael has finally
moved out of the house (yesterday), and the Mangers (Merry and Joselph, come
on, keep up) decide to retire on the beautiful shores of La Jolla,
(pronounced: La Hoya), California. Merry's Flexible Premium Universal Life
Insurance Plan cash value (depending on who you ask) is now worth $73,862.00
to $575,836.00, and her death benefit is $702,520.00. Life is good, so she
decides to "let it ride" another 30 years or so. (Seeing how Michael
has decided to become a Missionary, and single-handedly save the world. You go,
Michael!)
At age 95, Merry, who is now a widow and
grandmother of 12 fledgling missionaries, logs in to the Virtual Reality Online
Portal (formerly known as the internet), to check the status of her Flexible
Premium Universal Life Insurance Plan. Her cash value is estimated to be worth
$2,744,076.00, and her death benefit is $2,771,517!
Five years later, at age 100, Merry commends her
spirit to her Heavenly Father. She becomes a guardian angel to her great-grandchildren when she leaves a legacy of $3,595,193.00, tax-free, to her
heirs. (Not to mention her La Jolla Estate, a Venezuelan Villa, and a warehouse
full of luxury automobiles!)
The moral of our little story? GET A LIFE!! (A
life insurance plan, that is, for your little merry child.)
About The Author
Ron L. Bruster is a Financial businessman with a love for family and good, clean fun. He has been everything, in life, from a Migrant Worker to a
Corporate Vice President, to a Hollywood Stunt Fight Coordinator, to an
Internationally Published Writer, to a Security Officer, to a Successful Life
Insurance Agent; to... Well, he's not dead yet! Copyright 2005 RLB4Life, All
Rights Reserved
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