Sunday, May 24, 2026

282. Why People Avoid Talking About Death, Illness, and Disability (Part 2)

 


Avoidance Is a Natural Human Reaction

A client who avoids the conversation is not necessarily difficult.

The client is human.

People naturally avoid subjects that create anxiety.

  • They avoid what reminds them of mortality.
  • They avoid what threatens their sense of control.
  • They avoid what makes them feel guilty about being unprepared.
  • They avoid what forces them to make difficult choices.

This is why the advisor must be patient.

When the client says:

“Ayoko muna pag-usapan yan.”

The advisor should not push harder immediately.

A better response may be:

“I understand. These are not easy topics. But may I share why responsible families still prepare for them, not because they expect the worst, but because they want to protect the people they love?”

This kind of response lowers resistance.

It shows respect.

It makes the conversation safer.


The Advisor Must Not Sound Like a Messenger of Fear

There is a wrong way to discuss death, illness, and disability.

That wrong way is to use fear carelessly.

  • To dramatize tragedy.
  • To pressure the client.
  • To make the client feel guilty.
  • To make the conversation heavy, dark, or manipulative.

That approach may create short-term urgency, but it can damage trust.

  • A professional advisor must not sell fear.
  • A professional advisor must guide with responsibility.

There is a difference.

  • Fear-based selling says:
  • “What if something bad happens tomorrow?”
  • Responsibility-based advising says:
  • “Because your family depends on you, let us prepare wisely.”

  • Fear-based selling pressures the client.
  • Responsibility-based advising respects the client.
  • Fear-based selling focuses on tragedy.
  • Responsibility-based advising focuses on love, duty, and protection.

That is the better approach.


Talk About Love, Not Just Loss

One reason people resist conversations about death, illness, and disability is that advisors sometimes frame the topic only around loss.

But life insurance is not only about what may go wrong.

It is also about what must be protected.

  • The family’s dignity.
  • The children’s education.
  • The spouse’s financial breathing room.
  • The home.
  • The savings.
  • The business.
  • The dreams.
  • The commitments.
  • The promises.

When advisors talk only about death, clients withdraw.

But when advisors talk about protecting the people and plans that matter, clients listen differently.

  • Instead of saying:
  • “What if you die?”
  • The advisor may say:
  • “If your income suddenly stops, what part of your family’s life would you want to protect first?”

  • Instead of saying:
  • “What if you get critically ill?”
  • The advisor may say:
  • “If illness interrupts your work, would you want your savings and investments to remain protected?”
  • Instead of saying:
  • “What if you become disabled?”
  • The advisor may say:
  • “If your ability to earn is affected, how long can your family maintain its lifestyle?”

The topic is still serious.

But the tone becomes more respectful.


Clients Need Emotional Safety Before Financial Clarity

A client will not always open up immediately.

Especially when the subject is death, illness, or disability.

Before the advisor can discuss coverage amount, riders, premium, and policy design, the client must feel emotionally safe.

The client must feel that the advisor is not there to scare.

  • Not there to pressure.
  • Not there to embarrass.
  • Not there to judge.

But there to help.

This is why trust matters.

  • A trusted advisor can discuss difficult realities without sounding offensive.
  • A trusted advisor can ask sensitive questions without sounding intrusive.
  • A trusted advisor can guide clients toward preparation without making them feel attacked.

The quality of the relationship determines the quality of the conversation.


A Better Way to Open the Conversation

Instead of starting with product features, start with responsibility.

You may say:

“Sir/Ma’am, I know topics like death, illness, and disability are not easy to discuss. But because your family depends on your income, it may be wise to talk about how they can remain financially protected if life does not go as planned.”

Or:

“My goal is not to make you afraid. My goal is to help you prepare responsibly, so your family will have options if something unexpected happens.”

Or:

“We do not discuss these things because we expect them to happen soon. We discuss them because the people we love should not be left financially helpless if they happen.”

These openings are calm.

Respectful.

Professional.

They create room for a serious conversation without sounding threatening.


The Conversation Is Difficult Because the Responsibility Is Real

People avoid talking about death, illness, and disability because these topics are heavy.

But the weight of the conversation is also proof of its importance.

If nobody depends on us, maybe the discussion would be easier.

But when people depend on our income, our health, our work, and our presence, the conversation becomes necessary.

    • A breadwinner does not prepare because he expects to die.
    • He prepares because he understands that his family depends on him.
    • A parent does not prepare because she expects to get sick.
    • She prepares because she wants her children’s future protected.
    • A professional does not prepare because he expects disability.
    • He prepares because his income supports responsibilities that cannot simply stop.

Insurance planning is not about pessimism.

It is about responsibility.


Final Thought

People avoid talking about death, illness, and disability because these topics force them to face what they would rather postpone.

They are not easy conversations.

    • They touch fear.
    • They touch love.
    • They touch responsibility.
    • They touch the possibility of leaving people unprotected.

That is why financial advisors must handle these conversations with maturity.

    • Do not rush.
    • Do not scare.
    • Do not pressure.
    • Do not reduce the discussion to product features.

Listen first.

    • Acknowledge the discomfort.
    • Respect the emotion.

Then guide the client back to the responsibility.

Because the goal is not to make people afraid of what may happen.

The goal is to help them protect the people they love before something happens.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

281. Why People Avoid Talking About Death, Illness, and Disability (Part 1)

 


One of the most difficult parts of selling life insurance is not explaining the product.

It is opening the conversation.

Because life insurance naturally leads to topics many people would rather avoid:

    • Death.
    • Illness.
    • Disability.
    • Income loss.
    • Family responsibility.
    • Financial uncertainty.

These are not easy subjects.

That is why many prospects respond with:

    • “Huwag naman nating pag-usapan yan.”
    • “Ayoko muna isipin.”
    • “Malakas pa naman ako.”
    • “Bata pa naman ako.”
    • “Hindi pa siguro mangyayari sa akin yan.”
    • “Next time na lang.”

For the financial advisor, these answers may sound like objections.

But many times, they are not just objections.

They are emotional defenses.

Because the client is not only avoiding the product.

The client may be avoiding the reality behind the product.


People Avoid What Makes Them Uncomfortable

Most people want to talk about growth.

    • Income.
    • Investments.
    • Business.
    • Promotion.
    • Travel.
    • Retirement.
    • The future they want.

But life insurance asks people to also consider the future they do not want.

    • What if the breadwinner dies too soon?
    • What if a major illness happens?
    • What if disability stops the ability to earn?
    • What if the family’s income suddenly disappears?

These questions are uncomfortable because they interrupt the assumption that life will continue as planned.

And most people prefer to live with that assumption.

    • Not because they are irresponsible.
    • Not because they do not love their family.

But because facing uncertainty is emotionally heavy.

It is easier to delay the conversation than to face the possibility.


Death Is Personal

Death is not merely a financial risk.

It is deeply personal.

When a financial advisor talks about death benefit, estate protection, income replacement, or family security, the advisor may be thinking in financial terms.

But the client may be thinking about something much deeper:

    • “What will happen to my children?”
    • “How will my spouse survive?”
    • “Will my family be okay without me?”
    • “Am I ready to accept that I may not always be here?”

These questions can be painful.

That is why some clients change the topic.

    • They laugh it off.
    • They say they are still young.
    • They say they are healthy.
    • They say they will think about it next time.

But behind the avoidance may be fear.

And fear is not solved by a product presentation alone.

It must be handled with empathy.


Illness Forces People to Face Vulnerability

Many people believe they are in control.

    • They work hard.
    • They exercise.
    • They eat well.
    • They provide for the family.
    • They make plans.

But serious illness reminds people that control has limits.

    • Cancer.
    • Stroke.
    • Heart attack.
    • Kidney failure.
    • Major surgery.
    • Long hospitalization.

These are not just medical events.

They can become financial events.

A major illness may affect income, savings, investments, business operations, family lifestyle, and long-term goals.

But because the possibility is frightening, many people choose not to think about it.

They say:

    • “Healthy naman ako.”
    • “Wala naman akong nararamdaman.”
    • “Hindi naman common sa family namin.”
    • “Saka na pag mas matanda na ako.”

The advisor must understand this.

The client may not be rejecting critical illness coverage.

The client may be rejecting the discomfort of imagining himself or herself seriously ill.


Disability Is Often Underestimated

Among death, illness, and disability, disability is often the least discussed.

Many people think only of death.

But disability can be financially devastating because the person may still be alive, but unable to earn the same way.

That creates a difficult situation.

    • Expenses continue.
    • Medical needs may increase.
    • Family responsibilities remain.
    • But income may be reduced or completely stopped.

For breadwinners, this is a serious risk.

Yet people avoid discussing disability because they believe:

    • “Hindi naman ako maaaksidente.”
    • “Office work lang naman ako.”
    • “Malakas pa katawan ko.”
    • “Hindi mangyayari sa akin yan.”

But disability does not only happen to people with dangerous jobs.

It can happen because of accident, illness, injury, or medical complications.

That is why disability planning is not negative thinking.

It is responsible planning.


To be continued

#acgadvice