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Hey, free money
When my dad died, my brother found some savings bonds that our great-grandmother had bought for us when we were wee babies. I had four bonds - one from my baptism, one from my first Christmas, and two from February 1977. Since I am now the big THREE-OH, these old things are actually starting to fully mature. Whee!
The ones from 11-1975 and 01-1976 are ready to go and will give me about $600 of free money! Sweet! Now I just have to find time to get to a bank. Dude, that buys ~3 vials of ready-to-go sperm!
(The only problem is that my mother, in her infinite wisdom, signed the backs of all of them. With her name when she was married to my father, which is definitely not her name now. Gosh, I hope that doesn't render these invalid.)
The ones from 11-1975 and 01-1976 are ready to go and will give me about $600 of free money! Sweet! Now I just have to find time to get to a bank. Dude, that buys ~3 vials of ready-to-go sperm!
(The only problem is that my mother, in her infinite wisdom, signed the backs of all of them. With her name when she was married to my father, which is definitely not her name now. Gosh, I hope that doesn't render these invalid.)
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This savings bond has my name on it, just like it is now... but it also has my mom's married name on it (when she was married to my dad). And she actually signed the backs of all of the bonds already. Why? I have no idea.
Argh.
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Want more anecdotal evidence? I have checks from before I was married (I changed my name) and sign them with my married name. The bank doesn't seem to care.
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Can't complain about free money, though. :)
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