I sold everything—my boat, my pride, my peace—just to cover her sixty thousand in bills and pray she’d survive, and she did. Then she called me controlling and handed me divorce papers like I meant nothing, unaware of what I hid in the will… and when she finally discovers it, it’s going to break her.

She Abandoned Me After I Settled Her $60K Medical Costs… Then My Will Revealed Everything
Getting to Know the Surgeon Prior to Admission
I met Sienna’s surgeon in a small consult room by the admitting desk, where he walked me through the risks and the plan as a nurse handed over the paperwork. I read every page, initialed the boxes, and signed the consents, earning a grateful nod from him before he said they’d prep her once registration was done. After snapping a photo of her wristband and appointment sheet, I waited by the elevators until her name was finally called.

Getting To Know The Surgeon Prior To Admission
Gathering Approximations and Initial Records
The billing office printed estimates with line items for every medication, scan, and room charge, and the clerk slid a stapled packet across the counter, circling the deposit line. I opened a new manila folder, labeled it with the date, and tucked everything inside, asking for duplicate copies and a digital version, which she emailed before I walked away. Then I set reminders on my phone to track due dates and noted which bills needed receipts attached.

Gathering Approximations And Initial Records
Verifying Insurance Coverage
I called our insurance representative from the hospital lobby, read her Sienna’s member ID, and she pulled up the policy, checked the deductible, and explained what percentage applied for the month. I jotted the figures on a sticky note, underlined the out-of-pocket maximum twice, and took down the reference number she gave me as she flagged the account for expedited claims. I saved the call recording on my phone, emailed myself the summary, and then headed back upstairs.

Verifying Insurance Coverage
Listing Priceless Items and Taking Pictures of Boats
At home, I cleared the dining table and spread out a legal pad to take quick inventory, listing the boat, tools, stereo, and two spare generators with rough values beside each item. Outside in the driveway, I washed the hull, set up the ladder, and photographed the boat from every angle, capturing the engine plate, hour meter, and upholstery so buyers could see the condition. Then I uploaded all the photos to a folder and recorded the serial numbers in my ledger.

Listing Priceless Items And Taking Pictures Of Boats
Putting the Boat Up for Sale
That night, I posted listings on two sites with a clear, no-nonsense description that included maintenance dates, a firm price, a full photo gallery, and my availability for test rides. Within an hour, messages started coming in, so I answered questions about compression, service records, and the trailer, then screened potential buyers with simple verifications before scheduling viewings for Saturday morning and Sunday afternoon. Before going to bed, I printed the listings and stapled them to the inventory sheet in my folder.

Putting The Boat Up For Sale
Customers Examine and Test Everything
The first buyer arrived with a mechanic and immediately went to the engine hatch, checking compression, listening for knocks, and testing the bilge pump, lights, and radio. The second came after lunch with a multimeter and ran through all the electronics, and we took short river rides with each of them while they timed acceleration and steering response. Back at the dock, both made offers, and I told them I’d decide before evening.

Customers Examine And Test Everything
Taking the Offer and Making a Deposit
I called the higher bidder, accepted his offer, and set a firm pickup time. We met at the marina office to complete the title transfer and sign the bill of sale, and he handed me a cashier’s check that I verified with the bank over the phone. I drove straight to my branch, deposited the check, and saved the stamped receipt, then texted Sienna that the sale was final and her next appointment was covered.

Taking The Offer And Making A Deposit
Bringing bags and making a deposit
I went to the cashier window and paid the hospital deposit with the fresh funds, collecting a confirmation slip that I filed with the rest of the paperwork. Once the nurse cleared discharge, I gathered Sienna’s bags from the recovery ward and loaded them into the car. At home, I placed her suitcase by the couch, plugged in the humidifier, adjusted the recliner, taped the discharge notes to the fridge, and set alarms for her medication and wound care.

Bringing Bags And Making A Deposit
Marla arranges medications and groceries
Marla arrived carrying two grocery bags and a box of pill organizers, setting soup, fruit, and crackers on the counter and arranging the bottles by dosage. Together, we sorted the tablets into morning, noon, evening, and bedtime slots and labeled each box with the dates. She taped a chart inside the cabinet and placed a spare copy near the kettle, then checked the dressings, reminded me about hydration, and wrote her number on the whiteboard before leaving.

Marla Arranges Medications And Groceries
Setting Up Follow-Ups and Stitch Removal
I set the calendar for her follow-ups and printed the confirmations before we left home. At the clinic, which ran on time, I checked her in and handed over the discharge paperwork. A nurse clipped the sutures and inspected the incision, then gave us a care sheet with simple cleaning instructions. I scheduled the next visit at the front desk and requested a reminder text, then filed the appointment cards in my folder and drove her home slowly.

Setting Up Follow Ups And Stitch Removal
Organizing New Invoices and Due Dates
Two thick envelopes arrived in the mailbox, followed by three more the next day. I placed them on the table, opened each one, and sorted the bills by provider and due date. I flagged anything due within ten days and clipped those to the front of the folder, then updated the spreadsheet with amounts, account numbers, and mailing addresses. I prepared labeled, stamped envelopes, set calendar reminders, and stacked the piles in order of urgency.

Organizing New Invoices And Due Dates
Negotiating With Anesthesiology For Settlement
I called the anesthesiology group, read off the invoice numbers, and went through the account line by line with the rep, correcting a duplicate code and confirming the anesthesia time. I asked if a cash settlement would clear the balance this week; she checked with billing, returned with a reduced figure, and gave me a reference ID. I requested the agreement in writing, and the email arrived before we hung up, ready for payment once the funds cleared.

Negotiating With Anesthesiology For Settlement
Royce Helps Arrange A Short Loan
Royce met me at our branch and sat beside me while we spoke with a teller. He transferred a short-term loan from his business account to mine and confirmed the posting time. We printed the transfer slip, set a date to settle it, and then reviewed the budget on his tablet outside, agreeing on a weekly repayment. I thanked him in the parking lot and messaged the billing office to expect payment within the hour.

Royce Helps Arrange A Short Loan
Promissory Note Drafted And Notarized
I drafted a straightforward promissory note with the amount, no interest, and a clear repayment schedule. We met at the shipping store where the notary verified our IDs and witnessed our signatures. I initialed each page and added a clause for early payoff, then the clerk stamped the seal and handed us copies. Back home, I scanned the note to PDF, emailed it to Royce with the file name and date, and filed the original alongside the transfer slip.

Promissory Note Drafted And Notarized
Paying Off The Anesthesiologist Online
Once the transfer posted, I logged into the billing portal, selected the anesthesiology balance, entered the settlement amount from the email, and paid via electronic check. The site generated a zero-balance confirmation with a timestamp and transaction number, which I downloaded as a PDF, printed two copies, and filed one in the folder. I then saved the email chain to a labeled subfolder and marked the account as closed on the spreadsheet.

Paying Off The Anesthesiologist Online
Dax Delivers Work Gear For Sienna
Dax pulled into the driveway before lunch, stacking a laptop bag and two small boxes on the porch bench. He handed me a delivery form for my signature and took a quick photo for his records. The bag contained Sienna’s work laptop, chargers, and a binder with her forms. I signed, kept the carbon copy, thanked him for bringing everything by, and he nodded, saying he’d let her know before heading back to his car.

Dax Delivers Work Gear For Sienna
Saving Photos To A Flash Drive
I set the bag on the table, plugged in the laptop, and powered it up. I opened the photos folder and moved Sienna’s personal shots to a labeled flash drive with today’s date, verified the transfer, ejected the drive, and placed it in a small envelope. After wiping the desktop of temporary files and closing the laptop, I taped the envelope shut, wrote her name on it, and set it aside with the charger and mouse for pickup.

Saving Photos To A Flash Drive
Packing Clothes And Labeling New Address
I pulled Sienna’s clothes from the closet and folded them by type on the bed—jeans and sweaters in the first box, dresses in the second, and shoes with toiletries in the third. I sealed each box with tape, added a simple inventory, and wrote her new mailing address on top, photographing every label and emailing the pictures to myself for records. The boxes sat by the front door with the laptop bag resting beside them.

Packing Clothes And Labeling New Address
Boxes Loaded And A Quick Text
Dax returned after work with his hatchback idling at the curb. We loaded the boxes into his trunk, signed my pickup log, and snapped a quick photo of the labels. He closed the hatch, texted Sienna that everything was on the way, and showed me the timestamp. I noted the time in my ledger and saved a screenshot of the message. After he pulled away, I locked the door and set the remaining envelope on the hall table for tomorrow.

Boxes Loaded And A Quick Text
Forwarding Mail And Logging Confirmation
At the post office, I filled out a forwarding form with Sienna’s new address. The clerk keyed it in, stamped a receipt, and circled the confirmation number. I asked how long until the routing changed, and she said one or two days. Back in the car, I photographed the receipt and added the number to my ledger app, then taped a note by the mailbox at home for the carrier to watch for any stragglers.

Forwarding Mail And Logging Confirmation
Filing Cardiology Notes With Discharge
An alert from the cardiology portal popped up on my phone, announcing finalized visit notes. I logged in, downloaded the report, and printed two copies for the medical folder. I compared the medication list to the discharge summary and highlighted a minor dosage change, then called the nurse line to confirm activity limits, and she reiterated no lifting or vacuuming for a week. I filed one copy with the discharge papers and placed the other in the chart on the fridge.

Filing Cardiology Notes With Discharge
Physical Therapy And Waiting Nearby
I drove Sienna to physical therapy and parked near the entrance, checked her in at the front desk, and handed over the referral sheet. While the therapist called her back, I waited by the vending machines with a cheap coffee and my folder, reviewing billing reminders on my phone and adding the next due date to the spreadsheet. When she returned, we scheduled another session for Thursday and picked up a printout of her home exercises.

Physical Therapy And Waiting Nearby
Pharmacy Stop And Updating Chart
We stopped at the pharmacy on the way home and waited behind an after-work crowd. The tech scanned Sienna’s profile, pulled two bags, and went over the dosing with us at the counter. I paid with the card tied to medical expenses and requested printed leaflets. At home, I placed the bottles next to the chart, updated the times in pen, and applied fresh labels to the pill boxes. I discarded the outdated list and clipped the updated schedule to the cabinet door.

Pharmacy Stop And Updating Chart
Marla Cooks And Labels Leftovers
Marla stopped by after work carrying a bag of ingredients and her usual calm energy. She cooked a simple chicken and rice while I rinsed dishes and cleared space in the fridge. After we ate, she packed leftovers into containers, labeled the lids with dates on painter’s tape, and sorted snacks into small bags, stacking everything at eye level. Before leaving, she checked the incision one more time and set a timer on her phone to remind us about medications.

Marla Cooks And Labels Leftovers
Submitting Reimbursements To Insurance
That evening, I logged into the insurance portal and began the reimbursement process, uploading scanned receipts, entering claim numbers from each invoice, and attaching the zero-balance confirmation for anesthesia. When the site requested provider codes, I copied them from the statements and double-checked the dates of service. I submitted the batch, saved the confirmation page as a PDF, and emailed myself the claim reference numbers, highlighting them on the tracker spreadsheet.

Submitting Reimbursements To Insurance
Envelope From Sienna Arrives
Just before dinner, a courier rang the bell and handed me a flat envelope requiring a signature. The label listed Sienna as the sender, so I signed, photographed it, and set it on the table. Inside, I found a short note and a copy of her apartment lease with the move-in date, checked the pages for completeness, and saw the building’s parking form clipped to the back. I then sealed everything in a new folder labeled with today’s date.

Envelope From Sienna Arrives
Scanning And Securing Important Documents
I powered up the scanner and fed the pages one by one to avoid jams, saving the PDFs to the archive folder and renaming each file with Sienna’s name, address, and lease term. I backed them up to an external drive and verified that the thumbnails opened correctly, then placed the originals in a clear sleeve and locked them in the household safe. Finally, I noted the safe’s location on the folder in case someone else needed access.

Scanning And Securing Important Documents
Changing Codes And Collecting Keys
That afternoon, I reset the garage keypad using the manual and created a new six-digit code, testing it three times before erasing the old code from memory as instructed. I checked the hook by the door and found her two remaining car keys on a ring, which I placed in a labeled envelope and stored with the other returned items. Finally, I updated my home inventory list to reflect the access change.

Changing Codes And Collecting Keys
Separating Accounts And Requesting Cards
I met with a banker at the branch and explained that we needed to separate the accounts. She verified my ID, removed the joint user from my personal checking, and opened a file note for the case. I requested new debit cards and online credentials, which she rushed, and we reviewed automatic payments to ensure they were moved to the correct account. Before leaving, I signed the confirmation pages and saved her business card in my folder.

Separating Accounts And Requesting Cards
Setting A Family Attorney Meeting
Royce sent me the contact for a family attorney he trusted, so I called the firm, gave a brief summary, and scheduled a consultation for Tuesday afternoon. The assistant emailed an intake packet and a checklist of documents to bring, which I printed and assembled with our marriage certificate, the lease copy, and my payment ledger. I labeled a new folder “Legal,” filed the paperwork inside, and noted the appointment time on the kitchen calendar.

Setting A Family Attorney Meeting
Drafting A Separation Agreement
At the appointment, the attorney reviewed Sienna’s lease and asked about our timeline. He explained the basics of a standard separation agreement, covering personal property, vehicle titles, and shared accounts. We went line by line through the draft terms while he took notes on the furniture list, and he promised a clean draft by evening with a secure delivery method. I left with a copy of his retainer and a printed outline of next steps.

Drafting A Separation Agreement
Delivering The Draft Through Dax
That night, I sealed the draft agreement in a large envelope with a cover note. Dax agreed to drop it off at Sienna’s place after work and had me sign his log. I photographed the envelope and recorded the delivery time in my ledger. Later, he texted a screenshot from her lobby showing the handoff. I filed that image with the agreement copy and returned the phone to airplane mode for the night.

Delivering The Draft Through Dax
Mediation Scheduled After Refusal
By noon the next day, the envelope returned with the agreement unsigned and a brief note declining. I called the attorney’s office to ask about mediation options, and the assistant sent a list of local mediators with early May openings. We selected a date, booked the session, and received confirmation with the ground rules. I forwarded the notice to Sienna and Dax, then saved the calendar invite with a bold reminder.

Mediation Scheduled After Refusal
Keeping Bills Current And Tracked
I spent the morning keeping payments on track while waiting for mediation, downloading updated statements from the clinic portal and imaging center. Each balance was entered into the spreadsheet along with confirmation codes and batch numbers, and I mailed a paper check for a small account that didn’t offer online access. Before closing the folder, I noted which providers still needed to send statements to keep the records complete.

Keeping Bills Current And Tracked
Allocating Funds For Final Balance
An alert from the hospital portal popped up on my phone showing a pending final balance. I logged in, reviewed the line items, and matched them against previous payments. I allocated funds in my budget to cover the remaining amount and set a payment date within the posting window. I printed the pending statement, clipped it to the front of the medical folder, and set a calendar reminder for the exact day to clear it.

Allocating Funds For Final Balance
Arriving At The Mediation Session
On mediation day, Sienna arrived with Dax and a slim file, while I came with Royce and our attorney. The mediator greeted us, checked IDs, and explained the rules for speaking and breaks. We sat at opposite ends of a long table with notepads and calculators. After a brief summary of our goals, the mediator moved us to the first topic, and I slid our prepared documents across the table, waiting for the next instruction.

Arriving At The Mediation Session
Exchanging Summaries And Household Lists
We exchanged financial summaries and compared the figures against the bank printouts. The mediator inquired about the car, the couch, and the bedroom set, marking each item by category. Our attorney flagged the car title and insurance entries for later review. Sienna requested the coffee table and two lamps, and I agreed as long as the sofa went to me. The mediator recorded the tentative splits and then moved the discussion to the vehicle.

Exchanging Summaries And Household Lists
Recording Disagreements And Next Steps
The car became a sticking point once the appraised value was on the table. Unable to close the gap, the mediator noted an impasse and suggested valuations for the other items. He scheduled a follow-up session two weeks later and emailed a checklist of documents to bring. We signed the session summary, collected our copies, and stepped into the hallway.

Recording Disagreements And Next Steps
Filing Notes And Dropping Royce Off
I drove Royce back to his office and gave him a copy of the mediator’s summary, and he stepped out with a plan to adjust figures before the next session. At home, I scanned my notes, uploaded the PDF to our case folder, and sent a recap email to our attorney. I filed the originals in the legal binder and set a reminder to gather valuations by Friday.

Filing Notes And Dropping Royce Off
Backing Up The Mediation Report
I uploaded the mediator’s report to our case folder, naming it with the date and session number, and saved a second copy to an external drive, verifying the checksum before ejecting it. I printed a hard copy and filed it in the legal binder behind the summary, then emailed the file to myself and to the attorney’s secure address with a brief note for safety. The checklist on my desk received a fresh tick next to “backup complete.”

Backing Up The Mediation Report
Served Outside My Workplace Entrance
A process server waited near the lobby doors at work and confirmed my name. He handed me a manila envelope, asked for a quick signature, and read a brief acknowledgment. Inside were papers stamped with the court caption and Sienna’s petition date. I checked the time on my phone, photographed the front page, and secured the envelope in my briefcase. Before heading back upstairs, I texted Royce that I’d bring it by after lunch.

Served Outside My Workplace Entrance
Forwarding Petition And Scheduling Response
I scanned the petition at the copier and sent the PDF to our attorney, requesting a response meeting. His assistant offered two time slots, and I chose the earliest one that afternoon, adding the calendar invite, attaching my notes, and clearing space in the conference room. On the way, I brought the original packet and my binder so we could outline positions and map deadlines before the filing window closed.

Forwarding Petition And Scheduling Response
Response Filed And Disclosures Requested
After the meeting, our attorney drafted and filed the response through the electronic portal, confirmed the timestamp, and emailed us a receipt with the case number. He requested initial disclosures within ten days, including statements, valuations, and a payment history. I noted the deadline on a bright sticky and placed it on the folder’s front, and Royce and I divided the tasks to ensure nothing slipped past the first cutoff.

Response Filed And Disclosures Requested
Compiling Statements And Payment Ledger
I pulled the bank statements by month, exported them to PDF, and sorted them in order. Medical receipts went into plastic sleeves, each labeled with provider names and confirmation codes. I updated the ledger to reflect every payment made, adding references for quick lookup, then scanned the binder tabs and shared the folder with our attorney. A second copy of the ledger was saved to a thumb drive labeled with today’s date.

Compiling Statements And Payment Ledger
Printing Labels And Scheduling Pickup
That evening, I printed shipping labels for the remaining belongings destined for her new address. I scheduled a Friday morning pickup and paid for tracking on each box. The carrier emailed barcodes, which I taped to the lids and photographed for records. I messaged Dax with the pickup details and asked him to confirm someone would be available, leaving the boxes by the door with a checklist clipped on top.

Printing Labels And Scheduling Pickup
Asking For Estate Consultation Referrals
I met with the family attorney again to review progress and asked for referrals to a specialized estate consultation. He provided two names, noted their availability, and suggested questions to prepare. We set a tentative date based on how quickly the documents could be assembled. I left with business cards, a short intake list, and a reminder to keep my records organized, then reserved a slot on my calendar for the meeting.

Asking For Estate Consultation Referrals
Gathering Records Into One Binder
I gathered our marriage certificate, property titles, and every medical invoice linked to our accounts. Each document went into a three-ring binder with tabs for identification, property, and healthcare, with a table of contents in the front pocket and a checklist taped inside the cover. Since the binder was heavy, I copied the most sensitive records into a slim folder for transport. Everything sat on the desk, ready for the upcoming appointments.

Gathering Records Into One Binder
Notarizations Scheduled And Drafts Prepared
We scheduled notarizations for Thursday afternoon at the downtown shipping store. I printed the pages needing seals and added yellow flags where signatures were required. The attorney emailed draft language for review, and I annotated sections that needed clarification. I prepared a clean stack for signing and initialing, plus a separate set for markups. A final reminder pinged my phone with the location and required IDs.

Notarizations Scheduled And Drafts Prepared
Consulting An Estate Lawyer Carefully
I met with the estate lawyer two days before the final payment posted and explained the situation. We discussed safeguards for scenarios where a spouse walked away, including conditional bequests tied to obligations. He outlined reimbursement terms for documenting payments and how to incorporate them into future planning. I took notes, requested clear draft language, and scheduled a follow-up for signatures, leaving with a checklist of items needed to finalize the paperwork.

Consulting An Estate Lawyer Carefully
Copies Filed And Fee Paid
I left the estate office with two stamped copies and a receipt tucked inside a clear sleeve. At the front desk, I paid the consultation fee, signed the card slip, and requested a confirmation email. Back home, I added the email to the archive and printed a backup page, placing the originals in the household safe with the other legal folders. I logged the document titles, dates, and location on my index sheet and checked the box marked “secured.”

Copies Filed And Fee Paid
Sienna Moves Into Apartment
Move-in day went smoothly at her building. Dax met the manager in the lobby, collected a clipboard, and assisted her in signing the parking form next to the unit number. I carried the laptop bag and a box of kitchen items up the elevator while they checked the permit sticker. The manager provided a map of guest spots and a copy of the house rules. I recorded the time of the key exchange and photographed the signed page for my records.

Sienna Moves Into Apartment
Closing Storage And Splitting Boxes
I met the storage clerk and finalized the vacate form for our unit. We opened the space, checked the last row of boxes, and sorted them by destination labels. I scheduled a carrier for my address and a separate courier for hers, adding tracking to each. The clerk inspected the empty unit, signed the termination, and processed the deposit refund. I saved the closeout receipt and emailed both delivery schedules to our attorneys for transparency.

Closing Storage And Splitting Boxes
Linens Donated To Community Shelter
Marla stopped by with large trash bags and a folding bin. We gathered spare linens from the guest room, sorted sheets from blankets, and filled the bin to the top. She drove us to the community shelter, where a volunteer weighed the donation and printed a receipt. We wrote a brief description for the log and added my name for tax purposes. Back home, I filed the receipt in the household binder and texted Marla a thank-you.

Linens Donated To Community Shelter
Switching Utilities To Single Accounts
I opened browser tabs for the electric, gas, water, and internet accounts and removed the joint user from each, updated passwords, and set up new two-factor authentication numbers. The electric company issued a new account code and emailed a confirmation letter. I adjusted autopay dates to match my pay cycle and printed the change summaries. The spreadsheet received four new rows with reference IDs, and the binder gained a dedicated utilities section.

Switching Utilities To Single Accounts
Installing New Lockset And Records
On Saturday morning, I removed the old deadbolt and opened the new lockset box on the kitchen table. Following the clear instructions, the cylinder seated snugly after two attempts. I tested both keys, checked the latch alignment, and recorded the serial number on the packaging. The torn box and screws went into a labeled bag for warranty purposes. I updated my home log with the model, date, and installer initials, and placed a spare key in the safe.

Installing New Lockset And Records
Conference Call Sets Court Deadlines
Midweek, the court scheduled a conference call with both attorneys present. The clerk reviewed the docket, and the judge set firm deadlines for disclosures and expert valuations. I recorded each date on my desk calendar and mirrored them on my phone with alerts. Our attorney asked two procedural questions, and the clerk confirmed the process for uploading exhibits. After the call, I printed the scheduling order and filed it behind the mediator’s report.

Conference Call Sets Court Deadlines
Serving Disclosures And Confirming Receipt
I assembled the disclosure packet with statements, receipts, and the payment ledger, then uploaded it to the portal in four sections, adding index pages for quick reference. I submitted the filing, received a timestamp, and downloaded the receipt as a PDF. A brief call to the clerk confirmed the service notice reached the other side. I emailed the confirmation numbers to my attorney and filed a printed copy of the receipt in the binder.

Serving Disclosures And Confirming Receipt
Reviewing Sienna’s Disclosure Packet
The next morning, our attorney forwarded Sienna’s initial disclosures with a brief acknowledgment. I downloaded the packet, printed key pages, and tagged sections on personal property and vehicle history. The valuation notes included estimated ranges, which I added to our spreadsheet for comparison. We scheduled a short call to discuss gaps and request clarifications. I filed the full packet in the case folder and saved a backup to the external drive.

Reviewing Sienna’s Disclosure Packet
Mailing Receipts And Payment Summary
I prepared a hard-copy packet containing receipts, a summary spreadsheet, and a cover letter listing the contents. Each section included page numbers and a table of references matching the digital files. At the post office, I sent it via certified mail with tracking and obtained separate proofs at the counter. The clerk stamped the slips, and I photographed the barcodes for the ledger. Back home, I emailed the tracking links to our attorney and filed the receipt copies.

Mailing Receipts And Payment Summary
Courthouse Filing With Royce’s Help
Royce drove me downtown and pointed out the civil filings window near the clerk’s office. We pulled a number, waited by the bulletin board, and organized my packet by tab. At the counter, the clerk stamped each cover sheet, assigned a receipt number, and returned a copy. Royce showed me the self-serve scanner for future add-ons and the location of the secure drop box for after hours. I saved a photo of the receipt to my ledger and marked the filing complete.

Courthouse Filing With Royce’s Help
Mediation Continues With Revised Lists
The judge ordered mediation to continue, so we met again with updated asset lists. The mediator reviewed our revisions, compared line items, and highlighted any new or disputed items. Sienna’s column added a few kitchen pieces and framed prints, while mine clarified tool categories. We agreed to bundle the decor as a lot and revisit values once more data was available. The mediator postponed the car discussion until the end and guided us forward patiently.

Mediation Continues With Revised Lists
Debating What To Do With Car
When the car discussion arose, I suggested selling the second vehicle and splitting the proceeds after paying off the loan. Sienna wanted to keep it, citing her commute and recent maintenance. We reviewed the current balance, mileage, and insurance premiums while the mediator tracked the numbers. He requested three comparable listings and a payoff quote from the lender by next week. We noted those tasks, paused the topic, and returned to personal property discussions.

Debating What To Do With Car
Mediator Requests More Item Valuations
The mediator took notes as we listed jewelry and shop tools that still lacked values, requesting appraisals for a wedding band, a necklace, and my drill press, saws, and compressor. We scheduled a date to gather documentation and share photos through the portal. He recorded proposals item by item and summarized the missing numbers. Before adjourning, he emailed a worksheet and reminded us to bring verified valuations.

Mediator Requests More Item Valuations
Appraisal Scheduled At The Workshop
I scheduled an appraisal for midweek and met the appraiser at my house just after lunch. I unlocked the garage workshop and laid out manuals, serial numbers, and purchase receipts. He examined blades, bearings, and amperage ratings, photographing each piece in good light. Next, we went through the jewelry list, documenting weights and condition with a loupe. He promised a report within forty-eight hours and asked me to double-check the spelling of my email.

Appraisal Scheduled At The Workshop
Valuation Report Arrives Thursday Morning
Thursday morning, the valuation report arrived as a PDF with tables for each category. The appraiser listed serial numbers, estimated retail ranges, and fair market values based on condition. I printed two copies, saved the file in the case folder, and forwarded it to our attorney. The jewelry page included photos and weight notes, while the tools section highlighted recent sales data. I replied with a quick thank-you and confirmed the report would be shared at mediation.

Valuation Report Arrives Thursday Morning
Listing Tools And Answering Buyers
Using the report, I created clear listings with brand names, serial numbers, and appraised ranges. I photographed the items in daylight and answered buyer questions about usage hours and maintenance. Offers came in quickly, and I negotiated around the midpoint, setting firm pickup times. Each buyer agreed to pay with cash or certified funds and present a matching ID. I printed bills of sale and placed blank copies on the workbench for signatures.

Listing Tools And Answering Buyers
Royce Manages Safe Pickup Logistics
Royce managed the door while I verified payments and matched IDs to the names on the forms. We guided buyers through quick function checks, then boxed items with padding and labeled the contents. He logged serial numbers on the bills of sale, took timestamped photos, and had each buyer sign. After the final pickup, we counted the funds and recorded totals by category. I stored the proceeds in a deposit bag and locked the workbench.

Royce Manages Safe Pickup Logistics
Depositing Proceeds And Paying Clinic
At the bank, we deposited the proceeds and received a stamped receipt with the batch number. I updated the spreadsheet in the parking lot and recorded the deposit time. Back home, I logged into the clinic portal, selected the outstanding invoice, and applied the payment. The portal issued a zero-balance statement, which I downloaded and printed for the binder. I emailed the confirmation to our attorney with the deposit slip attached.

Depositing Proceeds And Paying Clinic
Sending Updated Ledger And Copies
I updated the main ledger with the new totals and created a summary highlighting payments since the last mediation. I emailed Sienna the updated ledger along with the clinic confirmation and itemized tool sales. Our attorney and the mediator received the same packet for reference. I requested read receipts and flagged the message for follow-up before the next session. The PDFs were saved in the case folder, and I backed everything up to the external drive.

Sending Updated Ledger And Copies