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📌 Founding Affiliates: How to Find & Share Your Link (Start Here)
You said you're in — here's exactly how to start, the right way. 1. Find your link (it's already yours). Skool gives every member a personal referral link automatically. Tap Invite in the group and you'll see your unique link, plus a dashboard that tracks your signups and earnings in real time. 2. Know how you get paid. When someone joins Premium or VIP through your link, you earn 40% every month they stay. It's tracked the moment they pay, held about 14 days to clear refunds, then it's yours. Refer a few people who stick, and it adds up quietly, month after month. 3. Share it the honest way — this part matters. This only works if it stays real. Two ways that do: - The personal invite: send your link to ONE person with a real note — "This room helped me finally get my family's papers in order. Come build with me." - The value-first share: post your own win or a helpful tip (here or on your socials), then add, "If you want in, here's my link." Lead with the help; the link comes second. Please don't: mass-tag strangers, drop your link in random groups, or make any "get rich" claims. That's not this house — and Skool penalizes spam. We grow with dignity, or we don't grow. Quality over quantity: one person who truly needs this beats a hundred cold links. 👑 For educational and informational purposes only; not legal, tax, or financial advice.
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Welcome — I'm so glad you're here. 🤎
If you're in this room, chances are you're the one your family leans on — the one who opens the mail, makes the calls, and holds everybody together. You've been the strong one a long time. And somewhere in the back of your mind sits a quiet worry: if something happened to me, would my people even know where anything is? That's exactly why this community exists. I'm Damita. If you've followed me for a while, you know my heart has always come back to family and legacy — and this is where that lives now. Chief Iron Mountain is for the responsible one, folks 40 and up who carry everybody else. What we do here is simple but powerful: we get your documents, accounts, and final wishes organized into one place your family can actually find and use. Not paperwork — stewardship. So the people you love inherit a map, not a mystery. You don't need to be wealthy. You don't need a lawyer on retainer. You don't need to have it all together. You just need to start — and done beats perfect, every single time. Here's how to get going (about 10 minutes): 1. Say hello. Go to the Introduce Yourself post and tell us: who are you protecting, and what finally made you decide to start? One sentence is plenty. 2. Grab your first win. Open Start Here and do the quick 10-minute exercise. You'll walk away with one real thing handled today — and that first win is everything. 3. Stick with us. I show up every week to move you one step forward. Come back, ask your questions, cheer each other on. This works because we do it together. No pressure, no overwhelm, no judgment about how behind you feel. One step at a time — I've got you the whole way. Welcome home. Let's build. 🏔️ — Damita This community is for education and family preparedness — not legal, tax, or financial advice.
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Introduce Yourself Post
👋 Introduce Yourself — Start Here Every strong community starts with knowing who's in the room. So let's break the ice. Drop a comment and tell us: 1. Who are you protecting? (Your kids, your spouse, your parents, your grandkids, your whole family…) 2. What finally made you decide it's time to get this handled? One or two sentences is all it takes. Nothing private required — just enough that we know who you are and what brought you here. Your honesty gives the next person permission to be honest too. I'll go first 👇 "I'm protecting my husband, son, granddaughter, sisters, grandmother, and my mother — and I started because I never want them left guessing." Your turn. Who are you here for? 🤎
If you die without a will in Michigan, the State already wrote one for you. You just don't get to read it first.
Most folks think "no will" means everything goes to my spouse. It doesn't. Michigan's Estates and Protected Individuals Code — EPIC — has a formula, and it runs whether you like it or not. Here's the part that quietly breaks up families: if you have children from a prior relationship, your surviving spouse does NOT automatically get it all. Under the intestate rules (MCL 700.2102), your spouse gets the first $100,000-plus (the exact figure depends on your family setup and it rises with inflation) — plus only HALF of whatever's left. The other half goes to your children. Now your grieving spouse and your kids are splitting the house. That's not a curse. That's just the default when you stay silent. Scripture says a good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children (Proverbs 13:22) — but leaving one on purpose is a decision, not an accident. Silence is a decision too. It just hands the pen to the State. Somebody is going to decide who gets what you built. The only question is whether it's you, or a probate judge reading a statute. If you've never actually written it down — or you've got a blended family and you've been telling yourself "they'll figure it out" — drop the word UNWRITTEN below. That's how I know who's ready to pick up the pen, and I'll walk you through what that looks like inside the community. For educational and informational purposes only; not legal, tax, or financial advice.
The day you die, your bank account can freeze — and your family may not be able to touch a dime for the funeral.
This is the one that catches people flat-footed. Mom passes. The money's "right there" in her account. But the bank locks it the moment they learn she's gone, because legally, nobody living is on that account. In Michigan, money in a sole-name account doesn't move until someone has legal authority — either through probate, or through the small-estate shortcuts EPIC allows for smaller estates (MCL 700.3982 and 700.3983), which still require a death certificate, a waiting period, and a sworn filing. Meanwhile the funeral home wants a deposit this week. Here's the part nobody teaches: there's a free fix you can set up while you're alive. A Payable-on-Death (POD) designation on a bank account — or a jointly-held account with survivorship — passes straight to the person you name, no probate, usually within days. Same money. Completely different outcome for your family. One form at the bank. That's the difference between your daughter grieving, and your daughter grieving AND begging. If you don't actually know whether your accounts — or your parents' accounts — have a POD named on them, comment FROZEN below. That's the signal that tells me you want to close this gap, and I'll point you to how we handle it in the community. For educational and informational purposes only; not legal, tax, or financial advice.
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Chief Iron Mountain™ Legacy
skool.com/chiefironmountainassociates
If everyone calls you when something goes wrong, this is where the responsible one finally gets it all in order.
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