A list of puns related to "Inheriting"
Pardon the dad jokes, I inherited puns from my father so they're basically He-reditary.
Anyway, now that my phone and I are back, I found an interesting build with the executioner, which will work for any high HP STR or DEX character.
Abilities: either Irregular Body or Erratic Evolution Vitality (Barriers > Temp Max HP) HP Boost (HP% boosts ร2, no HP limit). Frenzy (2x HP/damage, confusion) Willpower (no confusion) (Eventually) Limit Break: the HP and damage limits will become an issue pretty quickly
Any means of increasing accuracy Or Any damaging first strike skill from the boosted stat. As many barriers as you can get
Execution (I wish I had planned that part) Get into as many fights as possible, of any kind, and end them as quickly as you can. Vitality turns each barrier into an HP%, which HP Boost doubles, which Frenzy will ALSO double, which Erratic Evolution or Irregular Body will turn into damage. By bouncing from fight to fight, the HP Boost will overlap, and after a couple fights, you'll need (more) limit breaks.
Have fun, as much as one can in this scenario anyway. ;)
We got two types of genetics on previous games: Mendelian style on the sims 2, and hollywood genetics in the sims 3.
Which one did the sims 4 inherit? (pun intended)
Obviously I am way too young to be receiving this amount of money, but it just happened to be. I have lots of ideas on where I will be using the money/investments that I think will make a profit, but there is no guarantee of that. So I come here to ask for advice, how should I spend this? Invest into the stock market? Start a business? I am enlisted into the Army National Guard so I will have no problem paying off school. Please help.
He told me it originally belonged to his grandfather, and it happened to also be a grandfather clock
I said "well then, it's not just a grandfather clock, is it?"
He asked what I meant
I said "it's a great grandfather clock"
He groaned, but conceded the laugh at the end
Last night my grand father asked me to come over to his house, and he sat me down and explained his will to me.
Evidentially he has had some falling outs with his children and other family members and wishes to leave the entirety of his estate to me. It was a lot to take in all at once but evidentially I will be receiving 923,000 in financial assets (bonds, IRA, savings, and cash) and a litany of properties worth roughly 1,200,000. Next week he plans on taking me to meet his accountant and financial advisor to get a better understanding of his various financial holdings, so I will have more context then.
The advice Iโm seeking is how in the world do I navigate the family members that feel cheated. I have a good relationship with all of his direct children. They will all be left enough to not legally contest the will, but I am sure they will be hurt/upset.
Additionally any financial advice would be taken into consideration, but is not really what Iโm looking for.
TLDR; I am getting a large inheritance and donโt want to look like an asshole to those who feel cheated out of the inheritance.
Hoping someone in this sub has a similar experienceโฆ or adviceโฆ
As the title states, my wife recently found out that she will be inheriting tens of millions. Her father is the president of a midsize not commonly known company and heโs a pretty simple guy who lives alone in an avg to even low-end condo. Iโd known he was doing well for himself just by his job, but never imagined the extent of it with his middle class lifestyle. Plus he lives a few states over, so we really only see him a few times a year. Recently my wife met with him and some lawyers about the assets and she told me of the details that she could remember as it was a bit of an overwhelming experience with inheriting generational wealth.
As someone who grew up working under the table before I was legally able to work so I could help my financially struggling family, this is quite a shock to me, and even her. The obvious part of me is happy, I mean, who doesnโt want that kind of news? But at the same time it worries me. Iโve fully taken care of us financially since we started dating. I kind of assumed that role because I wanted to lead a life that was different from my parents paycheck-to-paycheck style. I went to college and got a BS in software engineering, payed off all my student loans, started reading books on investing and 401K, and developed an plan which I calculate Iโll have about 3M in investments by age 64 given the market continues to follow the historical trend. I have a good paying job and really donโt โneedโ the money to live the happy middle class life that we had planned.
But with this news I start to question if Iโll be good enough, thereโs seemingly no way I can amass that amount of money (30M+) to prove my โworthโ so to speak. I also wonder if the money will change her. Weโve been together for 10 years and love each other, also have a kid on the way, but will she want to explore other options in the future with no financial issues with the decision? I just wonder if/how it will affect our relationship. I already told her I donโt want access to the money, as far as Iโm concerned, itโs not mine at all. I also am unsure who to talk to, which is why Iโm here. I canโt tell my family or siblings because Iโm afraid how theyโll respond, for example why pay for dinner when my brother married into a millionaire? I donโt think they would actually say that, but they might think it, same goes for all our friends. I also think itโs bad optics for me after all my hard work, some might
... keep reading on reddit โกI mean, it says a child's mana is dependent on the mother. Wouldn't it make more sense then to keep the daughter with the highest capacity as heir and marry off the rest, including the sons? So the next generation of the family would just get stronger and stronger... unless I'm severely misunderstanding how heredity works lol.
I'm looking for advice on how to handle an $80k inheritance. I'm 26 and make $72,000/year before taxes. I do have $30k+ worth of debts though:
Additionally I do have an upcoming medical expense that I'll need to budget around $7-8k for.
I don't have any real savings (I do try to contribute 10%/month) or 401(k) at the moment since I've been focusing on paying debt (my employer offers a 4% match which I haven't done yet). I would do 401k contributions after paying off the loans though. Also I don't care about saving for a house at this point in time, it's not a realistic option for me given the city I currently live in or the one I want to move to in the future.
My take home is ~$4,350 and my monthly expenses generally range from $3,500 at minimum to $3,800 a month at the very most. This number includes $855 worth of payments to the above items.
The initial plan was to pay off the personal loan, car loan and $24k worth of student loans (keeping just the 3.79% one). And then taking the last $18k and putting it into my savings for 6 months of expenses, but I'm wondering if there's a better way to handle this?
My other issue is that I currently work in STEM but want to transition to pursuing a creative passion of mine. I can easily/should get a higher paying job (~$90k-$100k likely) but I like the one I'm at in terms of how easy the work is. Part of me wants to consider alternative options:
I'm also
... keep reading on reddit โกIโm a carpenter by trade, our company works on renovating older homes, so Iโm experienced with a hammer and power tools. But since Iโm inheriting a bunch of hand tools Iโm looking for beginner resources in terms of setting up planes, ensuring hand drills are actually drilling straight, sharpening planes and auger bits.
I really want to get into building things with hand tools when Iโm at home and maybe I can incorporate it at work in some of our restoration work.
I appreciate any good YouTube channels, forums, books, etc that people have found useful!
Also, how do you guys always seem to know so much about your older tools? So many of the posts on this sub are very specific in terms of brand and model numbers.
I put a decent % of money each month to my 403 B Traditional and Roth. If I die, I'd like my kids to have the ability to access cash rather than just big retirement accounts. Is there a type of retirement investment that would not have huge penalties or cashing out if inherited (if I die before 72)? I'd rather they are able to invest as they choose.
Inheriting $100 million when I turn 25 in a few years and several hundred million more after Dad dies. But Iโm feeling really burnt out. Thinking about getting off my ass and getting a job.
Have you guys ever dealt with this? โWake and bakeโ every day while waiting for โthe callโ is really stressful-even with top grade weed I get with my medical marijuana card. Any suggestions?
I would love to put a surefire muzzle on it for suppressor use. I also want to first add optics. Then a folding stock. Any suggestions or info I need to find out?
Greetings.
My dad died last year with quite a large estate ยฃ~2.5m and the biggest asset was his SIPP which is worth approx ยฃ1m.
My mum (his wife) was the only beneficiary and is entitled to everything tax free. As he died in his early 60s she has the additional option of cashing the SIPP out tax free.
Whilst this is tempting my brother and I have pointed out that the SIPP currently sits outside of inheritance tax. Cashing it out will it make the money part of her estate and we'll be left paying 40% on ยฃ1.5m when she dies.
My question is it possible to retain the SIPP and it's wrapper as part of my mum's estate? If so are they are consequences regarding the lifetime allowance?
Hi,
We are selling a commercial property overseas for $5M. The title is still under our deceased parents and we are working on the extrajudicial settlement of the estate. There are three heirs, so each one will receive $1.6M. The buyer can wire transfer the divided amount to three bank accounts in CA, USA. Do we need to pay any taxes? Any additional forms to file for taxes? I know California doesn't have any inheritance taxes, what about federal? We are notifying our banks about the large transfer and unfortunately, our CPA is a bit clueless.
Thank you!
Weโre Canadian. My parents own several homes. They have put down my brother as beneficiary. My dad told me heโll add me later weโre just putting it in your brothers name for now. Is he lying to me? I feel like he manipulated me. Iโm not sure. I donโt know much about this. But I donโt trust what he said. I donโt understand why he didnโt do 50-50 split between my brother and I.
In Illinois.
My 2 step-children (each around 10 yrs old) lost their dad recently. There was no will, no 401k, no life insurance, no savings and essentially no assets. Recently, we've been made aware he had a moderate pension payout amount and his two minor children were the sole beneficiaries. I'm really confused on what the options are with this money, their tax consequences, and which approach might be best for the children that will have zero need for this money till they finish college.
Some more background/context: Soon after his death, social security death benefits kicked in for the children (till they're 18) and that whole process went very smoothly. Since tax related questions follow, I'll mention the social security survivor benefits are about $20k/year per child. The majority of that is going right into a 529 plan so college will be taken care of, some is going to help cover the child support that stopped, and what's left over is just building up in their savings accounts.
The pension is a one time payout of about $40k per child.
Again, the children wouldn't need a penny of this till they finish college... and the plan would look something like them just using this money for a down payment on a house a couple years after college or whatever they choose. So this money will sit for ~15 years... and we (their mom... and I'm just helping give direction) feel it might as well try to grow in some index fund/ETF.
Our simple goal is to get this money in a brokerage account with the best overall tax efficiency possible assuming it won't be withdrawn for 15+ years. Their mom and I hate the idea of the government effectively saying "sorry little children that your dad killed himself.... now we want some of that money that is coming your way." If taxes are unavoidable on this money then, again, we're at least looking for what's the most tax efficient way to store/invest this money away for 15 years.
I see this as we have 3 options (of course their mom would have to be the guardian of whatever brokerage account we land on since they're so young):
** If it matters, I'm almost certain this pension accumulation was automatic (company paid) and wasn't
... keep reading on reddit โกRight now it is built on top of MUI v4 and using CSS modules. It was bootstrapped with CRA and uses storybook. Thinking its worth the effort to convert it to MUI 5. Would it be worth it to move away from CSS modules to emotion?
The main thing I'm not really sure about is the publishing process for the package to our own package server. Are there any steps I should be taking to optimize the package aside from running build with the `--prod` flag?
I can provide more information, just not sure what else might be useful to know.
I appreciate any input you can provide. Thanks!
So, firstly his mum is still with us and relatively healthy in her early 60s. What has prompted me to actually think about this properly is that my MIL has recently been complaining that she's had to pay the fees of the timeshares her and my FIL owned so she's now skint.
I knew from the beginning of our relationship that my husbands parents had Marriott timeshares that they got in the 90s. I never really paid it much attention because I wasn't really interested but after my FIL passed last year it became apparent that it was always taken on with the intention to be a massive piece of inheritance for my husband and now that we are married its obviously something that will affect us together eventually.
In the 5 years that I have been with my husband, his parents have not used their timeshares due to his dads health declining to the point that travel insurance was too high. From what I can gather they have some prime weeks in Hawaii every other year, about 6 weeks in Florida and then some in Spain. I don't really understand it but they seem to think that their Hawaii and Florida ones are extremely valuable because they bought the deeds (or part of) to that particular property at the time which they now think you can't do. I've tried to google to understand this more but I'm coming up blank.
Anyway, I guess the point I'm trying to make is that these timeshares that definitely were used to their fullest and enjoyed in the past, now look they will be a huge financial burden if they were to pass to my husband. When my FIL passed it actually sparked the first serious conversation about them, his mum said that on his fathers passing that Marriott said they could either keep her name on the title or put it to hers and my husband and then in the event of his mothers passing it wouldn't have to be inherited because he'd be surviving.
We discussed those options and he decided that if he put his name down he'd be half responsible for the fees and he's just not in a financial position to do that. He said to me then that he absolutely doesn't want to inherit these timeshares and he wishes his mother would sell them but she won't. It seems that his mum and dad were under the impression that Marriott would be keen to buy back the ownerships that they have and it'd be worth a small fortune so if my husband didn't want them then thats what he could do very easily and the money from that would have him set for life.
I fear that my MIL and FIL were sucked into believing
... keep reading on reddit โกI've save scummed 5 times now, and everytime my ruler dies, I end up integrating Poland, I don't want to integrate Poland because I like having my slaves do all the work for me and if I release them as a vassal, then both them and Byzantium will become disloyal.
https://preview.redd.it/fa8docdoiub81.png?width=3440&format=png&auto=webp&s=e1d05e3edcab7c69460e8e9efc81a4662e671db4
I'm closing on a house in Washington DC in a week and will be inheriting a tenant. The tenant is currently on a month to month lease and I'd like to begin renovations immediately. Do I need to officially be the owner of the property before I can provide 30 days notice that the lease will not be extended? I have asked the current owner for the lease several times and he has yet to provide one, but has assured me several times that the tenant is on a month to month lease.
I have upgraded the level, worked it out, and even upgraded the skill level, but it says that it canโt be used as Inheritance material. What can I do?
Hopefully this doesn't go too off topic and get locked!
I am a beneficiary of a relative's estate. This was all set up in a trust which is being administered by a bank (the bank is the trustee).
I have a small interest, around 4%. The largest 2 beneficiaries each have 3/8 shares, so 2 people effectively have 75% of the beneficial interest. Of course, these 2 people don't get along that well.
Most of the assets are in various land parcels- 600+ acres in total (all in PA). The land is all unimproved (not income producing) and mainly woodlands. There is timber value separate from the land value. There are some small parcels that could be divided for residential development, but the majority of the land is woodlands.
Given my small %, I have indicated that I would like to be cashed out, eg, someone can buy me out of my interest and I'll go away quietly.
The bank would like to simply distribute the land to all the beneficiaries and put all of us on the titles. This has not been done yet.
Before the trustee distributes the land, some of the beneficiaries are making bids for various parcels based on the appraised values of said parcel from last year. This more or less makes sense to me. I suppose they'd pay the estate (trust) the value of the parcel in cash for it.
But other parcels I feel there could be a fight about how it's valued, eg, is it land value, or is it timber + land value. Since the main 2 beneficiaries don't get along I think there could be a good chance no one agrees on any of the values for many of the parcels.
If this blows up, and no one agrees, the trustee will likely distribute the land to everyone based on their beneficial interest % and then we'll all have to agree on the next steps. I can't say as I blame the trustee for trying to remove themselves from this. And they would be clearly not be shirking from their duties and responsibilities by doing this.
My question (although any other thoughts or ideas are welcome too): If we all end up on the titles to the land parcels, I'm pretty sure they could not sell, encumber, or transfer a land parcel without my consent. But what else could happen? What decisions could be made without my approval? Could they sell timber without my consent? Is there anything I should be thinking about here? Is there a good strategy for getting out of this?
So I am inheriting my dad's truck. It's a 2011 Tundra double cab, 4.6L, SR5 TRD Off road 2wd with a fiberglass shell. It has 40k miles on it and has been sitting for at least 13 months now. I'm not sure how often he drove it before he passed last year, but it is white, with all sorts of grime and some fungus growing on it. I should be taking ownership of it sometime later this year.
I visited the truck just before Christmas last year and put a new battery in it and pumped the tires up. It started on the first crank. The plan is for my wife to take me to pick it up and for me to drive it back 2.5 hours (HWY) back to my house.
What should I be looking out for? I'm not sure I trust the tires for highway use. There's a tire shop just down the road from his house. Would topping the tank off with fresh gas be enough or should I try and drain what's in it? When I put the new battery in, it started on the second crank. I drove it around the yard at my dad's place for a bit with no problems.
Once I get it home, what should I get my mechanic to check? Or should I get a local mechanic to check it out before I drive it that far?
I'm just really not sure what to expect after a vehicle has been sitting this long. I don't want it to blow up on me. Hoping to keep it running for quite a while longer.
Obviously I am way too young to be receiving this amount of money, but it just happened to be. I have lots of ideas on where I will be using the money/investments that I think will make a profit, but there is no guarantee of that. So I come here to ask for advice, how should I spend this? Invest into the stock market? Start a business? I am enlisted into the Army National Guard so I will have no problem paying off school. Please help.
Obviously I am way too young to be receiving this amount of money, but it just happened to be. I have lots of ideas on where I will be using the money/investments that I think will make a profit, but there is no guarantee of that. So I come here to ask for advice, how should I spend this? Invest into the stock market? Start a business? I am enlisted into the Army National Guard so I will have no problem paying off school. Please help.
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