Why the Plan Doesn’t Matter, but Planning is Everything
Dwight D. Eisenhower once said, “Plans are worthless, but planning is everything.” While he was talking about military strategy, the truth behind his words fits estate planning perfectly. A plan on paper is important, but the real protection for your family comes from keeping that plan alive, updated, and aligned with your current life.
Many people treat estate planning as a one time task. You sign your documents, put them away, and feel relieved to check it off the list. Years go by. Life changes. Relationships shift. Finances evolve. Health can surprise us. Yet the documents remain frozen in time.
This is exactly why estate planning is not finished once your will is drafted. It is a process, not a one time event. And this is where planning becomes everything.
Life Changes. Your Plan Should Change With You.
Take the example of Maria and Carlos.
Maria and Carlos moved to Canada about twenty years ago and built their whole future here. When their children were small, they created wills naming Carlos’s cousin in Ontario as executor and guardian. At the time, it made perfect sense. Their cousin was close to the family, trusted, and very involved in their children’s early years.
But today their son lives in Vancouver. Their daughter is in university. Their cousin has since taken on a demanding job, moved to a different city, and is caring for aging parents of her own. She quietly admitted to Maria that she would struggle to take on the executor role now, simply because her own life has changed so much.
Maria realized her will no longer reflected the practical realities of her family. The document was still legally valid, but it was no longer aligned with the life she and Carlos were living today. This is what happens when life moves forward and the plan does not.
Most people assume their estate plan is fine as long as it is legally valid. In reality, a will or power of attorney becomes outdated long before the law stops recognizing it. Life changes faster than documents do. If your executor, relationships, finances, or health have shifted, your plan needs attention even if everything is still legally binding. Updating is not about paperwork. It is about preventing stress and confusion for the people who will one day rely on your decisions.
Amrit’s Experience
When Amrit’s mother passed away, he felt confident things would be straightforward. His mother had a will and had always been organized. But the will was fifteen years old. The executor she named had long since moved overseas. Several assets listed in the will no longer existed. Investment accounts had changed. Beneficiary designations on registered plans were never updated.
Amrit loved his mother, but instead of having the time and space to grieve, he spent weeks piecing together information, guessing her intentions, and trying to find missing documents. Her plan had not kept up with her life, and he paid the emotional price.
This is why ongoing planning matters so deeply.
Why Outdated Plans Create Real Stress For Families
Estate planning is meant to reduce stress. But when the documents are out of date, your family faces unnecessary burdens.
- Executors feel overwhelmed. Most executors are grieving. When they also have to interpret outdated instructions or track down missing information, their burden grows heavier.
- Beneficiaries may feel confused or hurt. If relationships or assets have changed, old instructions can be out of step with reality.
- Assets may not be handled correctly. Closed accounts, sold property, new investments, and changed ownership structures can all disrupt the process.
- The law may have evolved. Rules around witnessing, probate, separated spouses, or more may have changed since your last update.
A stagnant plan can create problems that a few small adjustments would have prevented.
Most estate problems are preventable. Executors struggle not because the law is complicated, but because the information they receive is incomplete, outdated, or unclear. A short review of your wishes, your executor choices, and your asset information can prevent delays, disagreements, and unnecessary tension for your family. Small updates now often create the single biggest impact later. If you don’t know where to start, reach out and we can give you the support and guidance you need.
Planning Is Not Complicated. It’s Simply Ongoing.
Eisenhower understood something universal. Life never unfolds exactly the way we expect. This is why the value lies not in the original plan, but in continuously thinking ahead, adjusting, and preparing.
In estate planning, ongoing planning looks like this:
- Reviewing your documents regularly
- Updating them after major events
- Confirming that your executor or guardian for your children is still willing and able
- Keeping a simple, current list of assets and key contacts
- Revisiting your personal care wishes
- Having honest conversations with the people you have chosen to act for you
This is not complicated. But it is intentional.
Evelyn’s Story: A Gentle Course Correction
Evelyn, a retired teacher from Halifax, always believed in staying organized. She created her will, enduring power of attorney, and medical directive years ago, and every couple of years she reviewed them the same way she reviewed her insurance policies.
When her daughter moved home with her two children, Evelyn realized her family dynamics had shifted. She updated her executor, clarified her wishes for personal items, and left a simple list of online accounts in a sealed envelope. When her health later changed, her daughter felt comfort rather than panic. Everything was clear.
Evelyn’s documents provided structure. Her planning provided peace.
Why Proper Planning Brings Peace of Mind
People often tell me that updating their plan gives them a sense of relief. Not because the documents undergo drastic changes, but because the plan finally matches their life again.
A current estate plan brings:
- Clarity for your executor. They move forward with confidence instead of hesitation.
- Security for your family. Your intentions are clear and current.
- Better protection during incapacity. Updated powers of attorney and medical directives reflect your values today.
- Peace of mind for you. You are no longer relying on a plan built for a life you no longer live.
If you are unsure whether your current estate plan still reflects your life today, a simple review can make a meaningful difference. As a Certified Executor Advisor, I help individuals and families keep their plans clear, current, and practical, so that executors are not left guessing at a difficult time.
Your Plan Should Feel Like It Belongs To Your Life Today
If you have not reviewed your documents in years, you are not alone. Most people put estate planning off because life is busy or because they assume nothing significant has changed. But once you begin reviewing your plan, areas needing attention appear quickly.
Ask yourself:
- Would my executor still be the right choice today
- Do my wishes still reflect my relationships and values
- Have my finances changed
- Have I moved
- Would my family understand why I made these decisions
If any of those questions give you pause, it is time for a fresh look.
Planning As An Ongoing Act of Care
Planning is the ongoing act of caring for the people who will one day rely on your decisions. A will is important, but it is your ongoing planning that ensures your family experiences clarity instead of confusion, and confidence instead of stress.
If you would like support reviewing your existing plan, organizing information for your executor, or simply understanding where the gaps might be, I’m here to help you take the next steps with confidence.
Visit our services page to see how we can help.
Watch our video here, or watch on our YouTube Channel:
Prefer a podcast? Listen here!
Please send us your questions or share your comments.
Disclaimer: This content is for general information only and is not legal, financial, medical, or tax advice.