Greg Shilakis - State Farm Insurance Agent
Providing State Farm Insurance & Financial services to Bensenville & the Chicagoland area for 25 won
The mission of our office is to help our policyholders manage the risks of everyday life, and to be the first choice for all of your DuPage, Cook, Kane, and Will County, Illinois insurance needs. We focus on auto insurance, home insurance, and renters Insurance throughout Illinois, including Bensenville, Wood Dale, Itasca, Elmhurst, Addison, Bloomingdale, Winfield, Wheaton, West Chicago, Berkeley,
12/09/2025
As loved ones travel in and out this season, your home becomes the center of every gathering, memory, and celebration.
That’s why keeping it protected matters. From winter weather to holiday mishaps, I’m here to help make sure your home is ready for a full house.
Call us today!
12/08/2025
Even the coziest moments can come with hidden risks.
A quick safety check can go a long way in keeping your home (and your holiday season) protected.
Stay merry. Stay safe.
12/05/2025
Some of the best holiday moments aren’t fancy — they’re the little traditions we look forward to every year.
That’s why protecting your home matters.
If you’re planning a cozy season with the people you love, I’m here to help make sure your home is ready for it.
12/04/2025
Happy National Cookie Day! 🍪
Just like a good cookie recipe, the right insurance plan keeps everything running smoothly — even when things get a little messy.
If you need help making sure your home is fully protected this season, we're here to help.
12/03/2025
Gratitude means protecting what truly matters—your loved ones.
Life insurance helps your family feel secure today and for every tomorrow.
12/02/2025
The countdown to the holidays is on!
Before the season gets too busy, take a moment to make sure the place where all your memories happen is protected.
From little mishaps to big surprises, the right insurance plan keeps your holidays merry (and your stress levels low).
We’re only one message away.
12/01/2025
Stuffing, casseroles, and cold turkey? They’re great for the holidays.
But your insurance policy? That should age like fine wine.
We build coverage that lasts—so you don’t have to second-guess it when life heats up.
Call your local agent today to learn more.
11/28/2025
That new TV wasn’t cheap (even if the deal was great).
Make sure your new gadgets, gear, and gifts are covered before they even make it out of the parking lot.
Call your local agent now.
11/27/2025
Turkey, stuffing, family chaos — we’ll cover (almost) everything that could go wrong this Thanksgiving.
Protect your home from surprises this season with coverage that’s anything but half-baked.
11/26/2025
Your home is more than walls—it’s where the best moments happen. Make sure it’s protected for every season ahead.
Call your local agent today to protect the place where memories are made.
11/26/2025
She inherited $116 billion she never earned—then chose to give it all away to people the world forgot.
Alice Walton was born into unimaginable wealth. Her father, Sam Walton, built Walmart from a single Arkansas store into the largest retailer on Earth. When he died in 1992, Alice inherited billions in stock—money that would grow into one of the largest fortunes in human history.
She could have lived like most heirs do. Private islands. Car collections gathering dust. A life of beautiful irrelevance hidden behind gates.
Instead, she made a choice that changed everything.
In 2011, in Bentonville, Arkansas—a town of 50,000, hours from any major city—Alice opened Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. Inside those walls hang masterpieces most people only see in textbooks. Norman Rockwell. Georgia O'Keeffe. Andy Warhol. Jackson Po***ck. The kind of art that usually lives in Manhattan penthouses behind $30 admission fees.
Alice's admission price? Free. For everyone. Forever.
Think about what that means. A child in rural Arkansas can stand inches from a Winslow Homer seascape without anyone asking if her family can afford it. A grandmother who worked the Walmart floor for thirty years can spend her afternoon surrounded by beauty supposedly never meant for people like her.
Since 2011, over 14 million people have walked through those doors. Many had never been to an art museum before.
Then Alice made another choice.
In 2025, she opened the Alice L. Walton School of Medicine in Bentonville. Not in Boston or New York where medical schools cluster like jewelry stores. In rural Arkansas. With one mission: train doctors for places where hospitals close, where the nearest emergency room is an hour away, where medical care is something you hope you never need because you can't access it.
The first five classes? Full scholarships. Zero tuition.
Here's what's complicated: Alice didn't earn this money. Walmart paid many workers wages so low they qualified for food stamps. The company helped hollow out small-town America, closing the mom-and-pop stores that once anchored communities. That's true. It doesn't stop being true.
But here's what's also true: When handed $116 billion she did nothing to create, Alice had a choice. She could have protected it. Grown it to $200 billion for reasons no human being needs. She could have bought influence, power, silence.
Instead, she asked: What does rural America need that nobody's giving them?
Beauty. Culture. Doctors.
Does this solve wealth inequality? No. Does it address Walmart's labor practices? No. Does it make her fortune ethically simple? Absolutely not.
But it proves something else. Even inherited wealth comes with a choice. You can hoard it, or you can ask what it might build.
Alice looked at small-town Arkansas and saw what coastal elites never see: communities full of people who deserve beauty, culture, and healthcare just as much as anyone in Manhattan.
She didn't bring them another Walmart. She brought them a museum. A medical school. A chance to see themselves in spaces that usually pretend they don't exist.
There's a Norman Rockwell painting at Crystal Bridges showing a grandmother and child looking at art. That painting is now in Arkansas, where grandmothers and children who look like them can stand before it and see themselves seeing art.
That's not an accident. That's a choice.
So here's the question: If you inherited a fortune you didn't earn—what would you build?
Because that answer tells you everything about what you value.
Some people would build walls. Alice Walton built doors. She built them in places most people with her wealth would never visit. She built them for people who were never supposed to walk through.
And she left them open.
Does that redeem the source of the wealth? That's for you to decide.
But it does prove this: When you have more money than you could spend in a thousand lifetimes, you can choose to be a gatekeeper or a bridge.
Alice Walton chose to build bridges where bridges rarely get built.
And millions of people have walked across them into rooms filled with beauty they were told wasn't for them.
That won't solve everything. But it matters.
~Old Photo Club
11/25/2025
Trust us—we’ve seen it all. 😎
No matter what drives you, we’re here to help protect it.
Call your local agent today and let’s make sure you’re covered for your version of real life.
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22 S Addison Street
Bensenville, IL
60106