"The simple act of saving a document to the folder to which a book points
makes the document a part of the book."

   While this is not the most 'glamorous' way to disassemble a document, understanding that it works this way may be the most important concept in this entire pamphlet. It is vitally important to fully understand that all that the tools discussed and illustrated elsewhere are nothing more than fancy versions of Word's native 'Save' function.

1.Highlight the text you want to save. (So highlight the paragraph starting with "A. I am married . . . )

2.Copy the highlighted text to the clipboard using regular Windows 'copy' techniques with which you are already familiar. (Either "Right-click | Copy" OR "Ctrl-C").

3.Open a blank document.

4.Paste the clipboard contents to the blank document (Either "Right-click | Paste" OR Ctrl-V).

5.Click Word's Save icon (or click File|Save) and save the document into the folder C:\Office Forms\Estate Planning\Will Clauses.  Use the name "Family Structure".

This simple act of saving the text as a regular document into the standard 'Will Clauses' folder (and nothing else) has made the document "Family Structure.doc" a part of the book called Will Clauses. (Of course, it is also a simple document in the folder called Will Clauses.)  The next time you display the Will Clauses book, 'Family Structure' will be there.

   As mentioned in the introduction, all of the document disassembly methods provided by Pathagoras are merely a variation on the simple, intuitive, manual method described above.