Just In Case
With these tools, you can Preserve Your Legacy through Legacy Letters, annual letters, protecting information, and adding LifeReadrs.
My Letters
Step 1: Initial Questionnaire
The first step in preserving your legacy is by stepping through the Initial Questionnaire. This basic process allows you to choose only those parts of your legacy that you want to share. Start small with some basic information. Build details into other areas of your life by returning to Initial Questionnaire to include more sections. Every time you visit this questionnaire and add more areas, you’ll find your personalized forms below. Those personalized forms will contain the important details of your situation that you can then share.
Your submitted progress is saved every step of the way allowing you to return when its convenient. If you ever want to edit your answers, you can click here again and make any changes you want.
Step 2: Complete Your Forms
We’ve included a comprehensive compilation of important life information. LifeWritr seeks to unclutter your life. We’ll only show you information that is relevant to your life; just the forms you identified as important in your Initial Questionnaire. If you don’t have an attorney, no problem, you’ll never see an entry for that information. But when the time comes, just re-enter the initial questionnaire and update the pertinent information, and you’ll see the appropriate form added to your list below.
Step 3: Your Public Legacy Letter and Event Letters
Tell Your Story. Our Write Your Legacy system allows you to use our free and paid tools to build both public and private legacies. You can describe yourself, write special annual letters to your loved ones, and help you store key information they’ll need in the future. Your public legacy is a page that can be seen by anyone on the internet and shared via social media. This is your own little slice of digital immortality. Your private legacy can consist of things you’d rather share with a few select people, like free annual letters to friends and family, information about your estate, and key lessons for the future.