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How to Name a Legal Guardian for Your Children — A Step-by-Step Guide

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How to Name a Legal Guardian for Your Children — A Step-by-Step Guide


Friend,
 
I wrote something for you.
 
This is the practical companion to the previous post. If you already know why guardian designation is urgent, this is the guide for how to actually do it.
 
There are six steps. None of them require a law degree. All of them require honesty and a willingness to have a difficult conversation or two.
 
 
Step 1: Make the Decision — Who, and Why
The first step happens before you touch a legal document. You need to decide who you are naming, and the decision should be deliberate rather than default.
 
Most people name the first person who comes to mind — a sibling, a best friend, a parent. That may be exactly right. But it is worth running the decision through a more rigorous filter before you commit it to paper.
 
 
The four criteria for a strong guardian:
 
Values alignment. This is the non-negotiable. The person who raises your children will shape who they become. They do not need to be identical to you in every way, but they need to share your core values around culture, family, faith, and what it means to raise a Black child with dignity and purpose.
 
Capacity. Does this person have the practical capacity to raise your children? Their age, their health, their financial stability, their own family structure — these all matter. A beloved grandmother who is 75 and in poor health may not be the right choice for primary guardian of a three-year-old, even though she is exactly the right person to have in your child’s life.
 
Willingness. Have you asked them? A guardian designation that names someone who never agreed to the role — and who may not accept it — creates conflict at the worst possible moment. Before you finalize the document, have the conversation.
 
Relationship with your children. The person your children already know, love, and feel safe with matters enormously. In the event of your death, everything in their world has already shifted. Continuity with a trusted adult is not a small thing.
 


Step 2: Name a Backup
No matter how confident you are in your primary choice, name a secondary guardian. Life changes. Circumstances change. The person you named five years ago may no longer be in a position to serve when the time comes.
 
The backup guardian steps in if your primary guardian is unable or unwilling to accept guardianship — not a competition, but a contingency.
 
 
Step 3: Have the Conversation Before You Sign Anything
Call the person you have chosen. Tell them directly: “I’m working on my estate documents, and I want to name you as guardian for my children if something happens to me. I need to know if you’re willing to do that — and I need to tell you what that means.” 

Then tell them:

  • What your expectations are for your children’s upbringing
  • What cultural and spiritual practices matter to you
  • What your financial arrangements will look like (more on this below)
  • Where your documents will be located and who your attorney is
  • That you will write a letter of instruction to accompany the legal designation

This conversation is not a burden. It is an act of respect — for them and for your children.
 
 
Step 4: Separate the Guardian from the Financial Trustee
One of the most common misconceptions about guardian designation is that the person raising your children must also manage their money.
 
They don’t. In fact, keeping those roles separate is often wise.
Your guardian is responsible for day-to-day care, decisions, culture, and upbringing. Your financial trustee — whether that is a person or an institution — is responsible for managing and distributing any money left for your children’s support.
 
The guardian receives funds from the trust for the children’s needs. The trustee ensures those funds are being used appropriately. This system of checks protects everyone, including the guardian.
The Legacy Essentials Bundle includes guidance on structuring this arrangement as part of a complete estate plan.
 
 
Step 5: Document It Properly
In most states, a guardian designation is made within your will. Some states also allow a separate “nomination of guardian” document that can be executed more quickly.
 
The designation should include:

  • Full legal name of your primary guardian
  • Full legal name of your backup guardian
  • A statement of your intent and wishes (which may reference a separate letter of instruction)
  • Your signature and the signatures of two witnesses, and in many states, a notary

Step 6: Write the Letter of Instruction
The legal designation names who raises your children. The letter of instruction tells them how.
 
This document is not a legal instrument — it does not require an attorney or a notary. But it is one of the most powerful things you can write. It should address:
Your cultural heritage and what you want your children to know about their roots
Your spiritual practice and what role you want faith or ancestral tradition to play in their upbringing
Your educational expectations and values
The people you want to remain in your children’s lives — grandparents, mentors, chosen family
The things you most want your children to understand about who you were and what you believed
 
Write this letter and update it as your children grow. It is, in the truest sense, part of your legacy.
 
 
The Documents You Need

  • A complete guardian designation lives inside a larger estate plan. At minimum, you need:
  • A last will and testament that includes the guardian nomination
  • A living trust (if applicable) with trustee designations for your children’s assets
  • A letter of instruction stored with your estate documents
  • A financial arrangement — life insurance, a trust, or both — to fund your children’s care

The Legacy Essentials Bundle at lamasonandassc.store includes the templates, checklists, and guidance to get all of this in place — without starting from zero.
 
The barrier is not the law. The barrier is the decision. Make it today.
 
[Get the Legacy Essentials Bundle]
 
Next in this series: The Final Blueprint — How to Make Sure Your Voice Echoes Long After You’re Gone.
 
I AM SOMEBODY! 🗣️

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