
100 Years From Now is a powerful blend of personal story, cultural truth, and practical financial strategy designed to help families build legacy on purpose—not by accident.
Through honest storytelling and clear teaching, Raquel Justeen breaks down how wealth is created, how it gets lost, and how ordinary families can build structures that last for generations. From wills and trusts, to family governance, to the emotional inheritance we carry, this book guides you through both the practical and the personal sides of legacy.
You’ll explore:
The systems that protect wealth across generations
The real reasons families lose land, businesses, and opportunity
How to rebuild structure, strategy, and meaning in your lineage
How to create a 100-year plan rooted in values, identity, and vision
How to heal, reflect, and rewrite the story you pass down
This isn’t just a finance book — it’s a blueprint for long-term family transformation.
It honors where you come from, clarifies where you are, and empowers you to build something your children and grandchildren can stand on.
If you’re ready to secure your family’s future and create a legacy that lives long after you, 100 Years From Now is your guide.
Six years after his death on the first Nationally recognized Juneteenth, a bridge was named in his honor. It was a powerful moment. His name finally etched into concrete. A public honoring of the work he’d done for decades.
But standing there that day, surrounded by people clapping and taking pictures, I felt something else rising in me—a question I couldn’t shake:
“What are we building with what he left behind?”
The bridge was beautiful. But the land? Still untouched. The family? Still unaligned. The name? Still honored in memory—but not in momentum. It struck me that recognition doesn’t guarantee continuity.
And what good is a bridge if it leads to nowhere?
This book isn’t about what we lost. It’s about what we’re sitting on—land, names, influence—and what we’ve failed to activate. Not out of malice, but because we’ve never been taught how to replicate, multiply, or sustain.
It’s about the difference between owning something and building something. Between a name and a strategy. Between a memory and a movement. Between the Brewers and the Wilders.
"This is what we need! We talk about wanting to build legacy all the time but our community doesn't know how to do the work. This book is the answer to that!"