How to Build a Legacy

Lyndsay Green’s new book on legacy, The Well-Lived Life, sets itself an ambitious goal. Its subtitle is “Live with Purpose and be Remembered”. Mixing stories, philosophy and practical tips on estate planning and philanthropy this readable book makes a bold promise.

Creating a legacy is hardly a new goal, and each era of history is defined by a ruling philosophy or religion. Green’s guiding philosophy is secular and individualist. She is interested in living life with personal meaning, before it is too late. Green’s foci are private lives, relationships and families, not professional or public lives (aside from a few artists).

Stories and Acts

A gifted story-teller, Green assembles a combination of historical and literary stories with contemporary examples drawn from friends, neighbours and acquaintances. In the telling, she reminds us that legacy is as much in the quality of the narrative as the quality of the act. What can we do to be remembered? Tell a good story and write it down – or convey it in other ways such as a legacy app.

But the book also focuses on acts. What we do matters. Teachers, mentors, grandparents, parents all shape and change lives of those around them.  Their lives and moral purpose lingers.

Green shares many conversion stories. People having an epiphany about their lives and relationships. The proverbial wake up call. We can turn things around – in part to be better and in part to be remembered in a more positive light.

Getting Practical

The book is at its weakest when it gets practical. The estate planning chapters on wills, bequests and executors are enjoyable but too vague to be helpful. The philanthropy chapter is a survey – a well-meaning skim of the subject. Not leaving a mess behind is driver of good planning. Doing good post-mortem is as much about well, doing good, as it is about the indirect benefit of creating a legacy for the donor.

The chapter I liked best is entitled “History Will Have Its Way with Us”, which is pithy and profound. Legacy can be created, but they can’t be fixed forever. I think of Sir John A. MacDonald. Canada’s founding father is now being recast as the architect indigenous cultural genocide. He had no idea. Our first Prime Minister was too much of a creature of his time to understand what it would mean to future generations.

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