Dealing with my brother’s affairs continues to be difficult.
He didn’t leave a will and that has made things twice as hard to organise.
It has been a steep learning curve for me. The hardest were
the immediate months after my brother died in which we had to get the death
certificate and make sure that all of his possessions were out of his rented
house (which was some distance away) while I had a painful arm. A painful arm
is not necessary during this time. I still have things to move from his studio
and to deal with a lot of his other affairs.
I’m not sure what I can say that would be helpful to anyone
going through a similar thing. Some weeks I would be spending a lot of the time
on the phone and writing emails informing people about Ad’s death. It was
important to have more than one copy of the death certificate.
The people on the other end of the phone and emails tended
to be dedicated bereavement teams and, on the whole, they were sympathetic. ‘I’m
sorry for your loss’, they would always begin and usually they were
considerate.
The learning curve for me was in finding out how things
worked. Especially the legal side. Some things were counterintuitive and seemed
strange to me. The numerous laws and policies regarding what happens when a
family member dies. I questioned the wisdom of many of them.
So, I printed off a sheet and tried to tick through each
task one by one, from arranging to get a death certificate through to dealing
with my brother’s digital legacy. I still do not have access to his Facebook
page. I was, and to an extent, still am, not in a state in which it is easy to
organise my thoughts and all of the things which I had (and have) to do.
Without the loving support of my wife, family and friends, I would have been
flailing.
Some companies were better than others. Tesco had good
policies – they even went so far as to transfer my brother’s Clubcard points
across to us. I’m not sure why my brother, never well off, didn’t use his Clubcard
points. His phone company EE also had a very kind policy in which they waived
the right to demand the rest of the money for his phone purchase tariff. I
found such things encouraging.
Other places were more difficult to deal with. I struggled
(and am still in the process of closing down my brother’s bank accounts) – the
banks seemed to make it deliberately hard. All the time I would find myself
getting stuck on some AI chatbot which simply refused to put me through to a
real person. None of them wanted me to physically write to them beyond sending
them identity documents.
The Government’s ‘Tell Us Once’ service was okay and
better than nothing, but didn’t seem to stop Government related post (which was
redirected) from coming through. HMRC are being particularly unhelpful and
demanding repayment for a tax credits overpayment. A council tax overpayment
also had to be repaid. The irony is that my brother kept scrupulous records of
his self-employed art business, even keeping every single receipt. I think he feared
that the tax people would penalise him if he did not defend himself in every
way possible. They still want money – of which my brother had very little.
Where the other organisations showed practical compassion, the Government liked
to stick to the letter of the law and pursued their legal rights, down to
asking for owed pennies back. One bill was for £1.63p.
Getting access to my brother’s Google account and email were
the most helpful things and I am savvy enough to manage most of that. He still gets
scam emails every day. There is no point trying to unsubscribe from them as it
just alerts the scammers that the account is still active and they would send
more.
I still have so much to do and at times it is difficult and
frustrating. It is not something which someone who is grieving should have to
deal with. They call it sadmin – literally sad admin. It’s time
consuming and onerous.
The main thing that I have found helpful is to break each
task down into smaller tasks and to keep a file of all the things that I have
to do. And to take breaks, simply for my mental health.
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