Territory that’s already available

Imagine you had an inheritance that you never realized. A distant relative may have given it to you in an inheritance, but you either didn’t know it, or you just never laid claim to it. Imagine it’s the greatest inheritance you could think of. It’s sad to think someone would miss out on the opportunity.

This kind of thing does happen in real life. There’s a recent story of a man, Timothy Henry Gray, who died homeless in Wyoming in 2011. Gray, 60, was found dead under an overpass in rural Wyoming. Wearing only a light jacket, it’s believed he had succumbed to the cold temperatures which had reached lows of 10 degrees. It turns out he was the adopted great-grandson of a former U. S. Senator, William Andrews Clark. He had made his fortune in the copper industry of Montana and held a diversified portfolio of assets. This senator’s youngest daughter lived in New York City and had died in the same year of 2011. Living as something of a recluse, she left no money to her own family, but had instead bequeathed to caretakers, a museum, a hospital, accountant, and other employees. Her estate included various properties—some palatial—and stocks, trusts, and cash. The sum total of which came to over 300 million dollars. As rightful inheritor to the estate, Gray was entitled to 6.25 percent of the copper mining fortune, making his portion around 19 million dollars.

Interestingly, it had appeared Gray had access to other money never realized as well. The coroner had also found a cashier’s check from 2003 which was for a significant amount. Gray was known to have worked as a cowboy and lived in the mountains of the western U. S. most of his life. It appears he was used to living by simple means.

It’s hard to say what his reaction would have been had he realized his fortune while still alive. Maybe he wasn’t motivated by money. But even so, it could have changed everything for him. Most of us read a story like this and feel an immense sadness come over us. We think, “If only he had known, he wouldn’t have to have died in the state he was in.” The opportunity he missed we sense and feel as well through a sense of empathy.
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But many opportunities go unrealized for each of us on a daily basis. Of course, most of which aren’t as grand as this example. But we do have territory available to us in the form of opportunities we either choose to take, or not take, every day. These things could change the entire trajectory of our lives. We easily see in this story the chance someone had missed in such a blatant example. But maybe we have similar chances available to us—we just aren’t looking hard enough. It could be we have an entire territory available to us. We just haven’t realized it yet.

…Let’s go deeper

Nye, James. (December 30, 2012). Homeless man who didn’t know he was millionaire is found dead before he could be told about his fortune: Body of ‘heir’ to $300m discovered frozen to death under railway bridge. Retrieved from http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2254875/Homeless-millionaire-dead-told-fortune-Body-heir-reclusive-Huguette-Clarks-300m-discovered-frozen-death-railway-bridge.html

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