What is a Personal Family Lawyer®?

Jon Kirk • January 16, 2026

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There are so many good reasons to communicate with site visitors. Tell them about sales and new products or update them with tips and information.

Here are some reasons to make blogging part of your regular routine.


Blogging is an easy way to engage with site visitors

Writing a blog post is easy once you get the hang of it. Posts don’t need to be long or complicated. Just write about what you know, and do your best to write well.


Show customers your personality

When you write a blog post, you can really let your personality shine through. This can be a great tool for showing your distinct personality.


Blogging is a terrific form of communication

Blogs are a great communication tool. They tend to be longer than social media posts, which gives you plenty of space for sharing insights, handy tips and more.


It’s a great way to support and boost SEO

Search engines like sites that regularly post fresh content, and a blog is a great way of doing this. With relevant metadata for every post so search engines can find your content.


Drive traffic to your site

Every time you add a new post, people who have subscribed to it will have a reason to come back to your site. If the post is a good read, they’ll share it with others, bringing even more traffic!


Blogging is free

Maintaining a blog on your site is absolutely free. You can hire bloggers if you like or assign regularly blogging tasks to everyone in your company.


A natural way to build your brand

A blog is a wonderful way to build your brand’s distinct voice. Write about issues that are related to your industry and your customers.

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By Jon Kirk April 6, 2026
The Hidden Estate Planning Risk for Blended Families Blended families are increasingly common. But they also face one of the most overlooked estate planning risks . Many couples believe the simplest estate plan is also the fairest: “I’ll leave everything to my spouse. They’ll take care of my kids.” That approach often works well in a first marriage where both spouses share the same children. In that situation, the surviving spouse usually leaves everything to the children when they pass away. But blended families operate under very different dynamics . Without the right planning structure, children from a first marriage are often accidentally disinherited . It happens more often than families expect — and it frequently leads to emotional conflict and costly legal battles. In this article, you’ll learn: Why “leave everything to my spouse” often fails in blended families How children from a prior marriage unintentionally get left out Why disputes frequently end up in court How proper estate planning can protect both your spouse and your children Why “I Leave Everything to My Spouse” Feels Right Most blended-family couples create simple wills that leave everything to each other. They also name their spouse as the beneficiary of: retirement accounts life insurance policies investment accounts On the surface, this feels perfectly reasonable. You trust your spouse. You expect they’ll “do the right thing.” You may have even said something like: “Of course you’ll make sure my kids are taken care of.” And while both spouses are alive, the family may get along beautifully. Holidays are shared. Grandchildren visit. There is no visible tension. But the law doesn’t enforce verbal promises. It enforces ownership. If you leave assets outright to your spouse, those assets legally become their property — completely and permanently . That means: There are no restrictions on how those assets are used There is no legal requirement to preserve anything for your children There is no obligation to follow what you intended Your spouse now owns everything. And ownership changes everything. The Pattern That Repeats in Blended Families When one spouse inherits everything outright, a predictable pattern often unfolds. Life continues. The surviving spouse may: remarry update their estate plan change beneficiary designations spend assets on retirement, healthcare, or a new lifestyle Even without bad intentions, many surviving spouses naturally prioritize their own biological children . That’s human nature. So when the surviving spouse eventually passes away, their estate plan often leaves everything to their children — not yours . At that point, your children from a prior marriage may receive nothing. Not because you didn’t love them. Not because you intended to exclude them. But because the structure of the plan allowed it . This is one of the most common estate planning mistakes blended families make. When Family Conflict Turns Into Litigation When children from a first marriage are unexpectedly disinherited, the reaction is often shock. They may believe their parent intended for them to receive something. They may remember conversations or promises. But when they discover they’ve been left out, the conflict often escalates quickly. In many cases, it ends up in court. A typical scenario looks like this: The deceased spouse’s children challenge the will They claim the surviving spouse manipulated their parent They argue their parent lacked mental capacity when the will was signed The surviving spouse hires legal counsel to defend the estate The result can be devastating. Families can spend $50,000–$100,000 or more on legal fees. Estate administration can be delayed months or even years . Family relationships that once seemed strong can be permanently damaged . And after all of that, the court rarely overturns a properly executed will. Judges generally assume that if you signed a will, you intended the result. Even worse, some children cannot afford to contest the will at all. Litigation requires significant financial resources. If the surviving spouse controls the assets, the children may simply have no ability to fight. The result is predictable: resentment bitterness fractured families and outcomes no one truly wanted The time to prevent this is before the first spouse dies — not after . The Real Issue Isn’t Trust — It’s Structure Most blended-family problems are not caused by a lack of love or trust. They’re caused by an incomplete estate plan . When assets pass outright to a surviving spouse, the plan removes any safeguards that protect the children from the first marriage. At that point, the entire outcome depends on future decisions that the deceased spouse can no longer influence. A well-designed estate plan solves this problem through structure . That structure might include: using a trust instead of leaving assets outright defining how assets can be used during the surviving spouse’s lifetime preserving a portion of assets for children from the first marriage coordinating beneficiary designations with the overall plan clearly communicating intentions while everyone is alive This type of planning does not signal distrust . Instead, it creates clarity, fairness, and protection for everyone involved. The right plan protects your spouse while also preserving your children’s inheritance. You don’t have to choose between them. Protect Your Spouse — And Your Children If you are part of a blended family, a simple “everything to my spouse” plan may not accomplish what you believe it will. Without proper planning, the people you love most may end up facing conflict, confusion, and financial loss. A well-designed estate plan can ensure: your spouse is financially secure your children remain protected your wishes are honored your family avoids unnecessary legal battles At Kirk Law, we begin with education. We help families understand exactly what would happen if something happened to them today . From there, we design a Life & Legacy Plan that clearly documents your wishes and protects the people you care about most. Most importantly, when you’re gone, your loved ones won’t be left alone to figure things out while grieving. They’ll have a trusted advisor who understands your family and can guide them through the process. Let’s create a plan that protects your spouse, honors your children, and prevents the conflicts I see far too often.
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