When the person you love dies, you might think the grief is the toughest thing you’ll have to get through.
But all of sudden there’s bills to pay. Hefty funeral costs to cover and a million forms to fill out.
Things that if you’re anything like Robin Bailey, you never had to deal with.
When Robin’s husband Tony died by suicide, not only was she left reeling from the shock and sorrow, but she was suddenly thrust into a financial crisis that she had no idea how to handle.
Listen: Robin tells her story on the latest episode of The Well podcast.
Robin poses a question to all the women listening to the show: “Do you know your financial situation? Are you aware of where your money goes? If you’re not paying the bills, do you know pass codes? Do you know where the accounts are?”
She didn’t. Tony died interstate, without a will, and she had to learn everything the really hard, horrible way.
“After Tony died… Until the police have come, often your accounts can be frozen. You have no access to money particularly if you’ve got joint accounts and you don’t have a single account,” the radio host says.
“I didn’t know pass codes. I didn’t know how to even access our banking… It’s appalling!”
And don’t think that death gives you a free pass, no one else is going to take care of things for you.
Top Comments
I can't believe even how many of my friends who are in their 40's and 50's are like this, they don't even realise how much their husbands do for them and they complain about them. I listen to them the whole time thinking how will you possibly manage if for whatever reason their husbands are no longer around and with a little bit of envy being a single parent of two children who works full time and has to do absolutely everything without help.
Thank you for this podcast. I found it rather reassuring that I wasn't alone. I'm still in a mess financially after my husband ran off with someone. He took care of all the finances, or so I thought, and what I discovered in the months after he chose to end our marriage, rocked me to my core. After 30yrs of marriage I was essentially left with nothing. Not quite sure how to get my head around everything so I've buried my head in the sand so to speak. I know I must make sense of it all but truthfully I've no idea where to turn. I can't tell my family, my twenty something kids, my friends the whole truth as I'm so ashamed. How foolish and trusting I was. Thankfully a house comes with my job so I did not find myself homeless. With only 14yrs left of a working life I've no idea how to start from scratch or even what my future holds.