How Jamie Sue Marshall uses life insurance to create a legacy

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Not everyone is prepared or as generous as Jamie Sue Marshall. She’s always been a financial dynamo.

Her senior year of college, Jamie Sue flipped a home when she was taking 23 hours of coursework at the University of Arkansas while simultaneously interning at Tysons’ Foods.

“I raised a beef steer each summer and sold them, so that’s how I had the money to buy the house,” Jamie Sue says. “I watched Fixer Upper and all that, and thought, ‘Oh, so much fun,’ right? No, I mean, there are so many unexpected expenses and things happening, especially me buying a 1950s home from the original owner that had not touched a single thing.”

The hard work didn’t stop her. Jamie Sue gutted the house in time to move in after college. In October, she decided to move back home to be closer to her family and join the family business.

Jamie Sue’s family runs a farm and produce company in upstate New York where she is a dispatcher for its refrigeration trucks.

“It’s a 12th generation farm, and we’re working together in the business, we’ve probably got 30 family members,” Jamie Sue says. “My dad runs the refrigerated freight. My mom is a grower of all the produce. My uncle has seven children, and now they’ve all got kids, so it’s pretty crazy around here.”

Jamie Sue, 23, enjoys working with her family and living in the small town of Elba (Pop: 2,370) where she grew up and led her high school basketball team to a state championship. “I call it ‘Smellba,’ though, because we’re the onion capital of the world, and then we also have a bunch of cows, so it’s a little stinky here,” she says.

Some people would be frustrated working with family, but it’s a source of pride for Jamie Sue.

“When you have your relationship with your father, he’s just your father, you see him when he comes home and how he’s working, but you don’t get to actually work alongside him,” she says. “So the highlight of my week is seeing him with his employees and how he is a businessman and not only a father. I also enjoy getting to work with my cousins, just being around my family and the people I care about.”

Preparing for the worst

The importance of being surrounded by the ones you love became clearer to Jamie Sue in 2017 when her large, close-knit family suffered a sudden loss.

Her young cousin, only 30 years old, was diagnosed with stage 4 gastric cancer while she was 6 ½ months pregnant. Two days after the diagnosis her cousin had to give birth to her baby at Golisano Children’s Hospital in Rochester, NY. Too soon after, her cousin passed away as cancer spread throughout her body leaving behind her baby girl, 2-year-old son and husband. “It was so life-changing for me. It encouraged me to make time for the little things like volunteering to coach in our town’s youth basketball program.”

After the tragedy, Jamie Sue wanted a large life insurance policy with a long term length to financially guard against whatever the future may hold. “We searched for reliable options to protect each other in case another life-changing incident like that happened in the future,” she says. “It was such an overwhelming and confusing time. My family helped me piece it all together.”

My parents, my sisters and I were just researching different options and we saw Haven Life featured in The Wall Street Journal.

Jamie Sue’s search for life insurance eventually led her to Haven Life.

“My parents, my sisters and I were just researching different options and we saw Haven Life featured in The Wall Street Journal,” she says. “When I was applying for a policy, we asked them some quick questions, customer service quickly responded to those questions, and I was instantly approved, which made it a perfect fit.”

Just starting her career, Jamie Sue, 21 at the time, bought a 30-year, $1 million Haven Term policy.

Looking to the future

People ask Jamie Sue, “You’re young, why would you need life insurance?” She’s not in debt and she hasn’t started her own family yet. She tells them if the unexpected were to happen, she wants the life insurance payout to “go back to my community.”

What does that mean? Well, after the death of her cousin, the town alumni association put together an alumni basketball game, where half the proceeds went to Golisano Children’s Hospital NICU in memory of Jamie Sue’s cousin.

“Now the entire youth basketball program wears ‘Torrey Strong’ jerseys that were made in her memory,” says Jamie Sue, who has taken over coaching the 5th grade girls squad.

Ask Jamie Sue what she would like done with her life insurance payout if something unexpected were to happen to her. “I’d like something like that done in my name because it’s a really sweet way to leave a legacy,” Jamie Sue says. She remembers her cousin, rallies all her girls with “Torrey Strong” jerseys on the court and sees how a small community with deep roots can make such a meaningful impact.

The post How Jamie Sue Marshall uses life insurance to create a legacy appeared first on Blog | Haven Life | Life insurance & Personal Finance Tips.



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