All at once in 2021, Judith Coggins realized she was going to die. Not anytime soon, but eventually, as everyone does.
Well, technically, of course, she'd always known that. She just hadn't spent much time thinking about it. But when her younger brother died suddenly in August of that year, Coggins started considering aspects of her own death, whenever that might happen in the future, and wondering who would handle her affairs.
Coggins, a 78-year-old Minneapolis resident, is divorced, with no children, no living siblings or parents. Her brother had known her wishes — for health care, estate distribution and so on — and was prepared to make whatever decisions she couldn't, toward the end of her life and afterward. Now there was nobody in that role.
She looked around at the rest of her relatives and asked a nephew with a medical background if he could represent her in end-of-life issues.
"The first time I talked to him, his eyes filled up with tears and I thought, no, this boy is not going to be able to deal with that," she said. "Dying is complicated, it really is."
People in Coggins' situation are known as "solos" — those without anyone in a position to aid, support and represent them as they age and begin needing more help.
Linda J. Camp, a St. Paul-based independent consultant, is trying to spread awareness of solos' predicament, in a society that widely assumes everyone has someone who will be there when the time comes.
"All of the policies and practices out there are built on the assumption that somebody will be available," Camp said. "A significant portion of the population simply does not have that support. Yet the systems are not changing to meet those needs."