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Pioneer
Press
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ASK DAD: Good Will Good Legacy
If
you're looking for something uplifting to watch for Father's
Day, I recommend you don't rent "About Schmidt."
It's
the story of a sad, lonely man (played wonderfully by Jack
Nicholson) who is desperately trying to convince his daughter
that she's making a dreadful mistake.
Too
late. His chances to communicate with his adult daughter evaporated
years earlier for reasons that are both apparent and mysterious.
All he can do, finally, is to mouth the platitudes she wants
to hear, in the interest of maintaining some connection to
her.
It's
not the kind of place a father in his 60s wants to find himself,
and it's not the kind of movie you want to put into the DVD
on Father's Day. But the film resonated with Les Kotzer. He
sees guys like Warren Schmidt all the time.
Kotzer
is a Toronto attorney who co-wrote the book "The Family
Fight," which outlines all the ways a well-intentioned
parent can turn his or her family into a battleground or a
collection of cold shoulders.
"I'm
a wills and estates lawyer," Kotzer says. "I focus
on the avoidance of family fighting. I'm trying to provide
preventative medicine."
He
mentions the father-daughter relationship in "About Schmidt"
as typical of those he sees in his practice. Resentments can
build over the years, and they are exacerbated because of
economic issues. A man like Schmidt works hard and saves his
money so he can retire in some comfort, while his children
spend money they don't have and count on Dad to bail them
out.
"A
lot of kids are waiting for and depending on their inheritance,"
Kotzer says. "The issue is going to get worse as we live
on."
It
often spills over when the parent dies — especially
if the parents and the children don't talk about what they
want and expect from each other while the parents are still
alive.
"I
saw a woman carrying a crystal vase in my parking lot,"
Kotzer says. "She said, 'I bought this for my mother
for her 75th birthday, and I would like it back.' We said
it belongs to the estate; the estate said all those personal
effects are to be sold and the money divided.
"So,
she dropped it and said, 'Now, nobody can have it.' "
If
she had told her mother she wanted the vase, her mother might
well have put that in her will. But without specific instructions,
there was nothing the attorneys could do.
"I
hear this often: 'My kids will work this out. They love each
other,' " Kotzer says. "Don't assume good will between
your children. You can be masters of the destruction of your
own family. I'll have parents come in to me and trivialize
personal items. One of the things kids fight over is not just
the money but the memories in the house."
Take
this Father's Day as an opportunity to look at what you will
eventually leave behind — not just the memories and
not just the possessions but the intentions. Otherwise, your
kids are likely to be paying a visit to someone like Les Kotzer.
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