Things I Didn't Say at the Funeral
đ Emotionally raw and vulnerable â perfect for readers seeking honesty, grief, or healing stories. Fits current Vocal challenge themes too.

I didnât cry at the funeral.
Not because I wasnât sad â I was.
I was undone.
But grief doesnât always look like tears. Sometimes it looks like silence so loud it echoes inside your ribs.
I sat in the third pew, between Aunt Claraâs perfume and my cousinâs hollow stare. The flowers smelled too sweet. The music was too soft. The preacher, who didnât even know you, read from Psalms like he was ordering lunch.
And all I could think was â I should say something.
But I didnât.
There are so many things I didnât say that day, Grandpa.
Things Iâve held in my throat since the moment the phone rang.
I didnât say that you smelled like cedar and spearmint gum.
That your hugs were awkward and one-armed, but I loved them anyway.
That you always whistled when you cooked eggs and whistled off-key, and I didnât care.
I didnât tell them how you used to tap the roof of the car three times whenever we passed the old steel bridge â said it was for luck. I still do it. No one else knows why. But I remember.
I didnât say how you stayed up with me the night Mom left, just sitting on the porch in silence, not offering words you didnât have.
How you handed me a mug of cocoa and said, âSome nights we donât fix things. We just hold them.â
That sentence saved me more times than I can count.
I didnât say that when I failed my first college class and came home ashamed, you didnât ask why â you just handed me a wrench and said, âHelp me fix the gate.â
You always knew when to talk. And more importantly, when not to.
They called you âa man of few wordsâ at the funeral.
I wanted to stand and shout, No â he just saved his words for when they mattered.
Thereâs a difference.
They said you were âquiet and strong.â
They didnât see you weep behind the shed after Grandma died, fists clenched so tightly your knuckles turned bone-white.
They didnât know that strength can look like grief with no audience.
I wanted to tell them about the time you taught me how to drive stick shift and I stalled six times in a row.
You never raised your voice.
You just said, âTry again. Weâve got time.â
Iâve carried that phrase into every failure since.
At the funeral, I didnât say I was sorry.
Sorry for every birthday I forgot to call.
Sorry for not visiting more.
Sorry for the last time I saw you â when I was in a rush and hugged you like I had somewhere better to be.
There wasnât anywhere better.
I wanted to tell them how you believed in second chances â how you forgave Uncle Ray even after all the mess he made.
How you once told me, âNo oneâs just the worst thing theyâve done.â
How that line made me forgive myself when I thought I couldnât.
I wanted to tell them you whistled the same tune every morning â even after your hands shook and your knees ached and the world moved too fast around you.
I didnât say that I still hear your voice sometimes â especially when the world goes quiet.
Like a whisper in the wind that smells faintly of sawdust and coffee.
Like an echo in the garage when I reach for a wrench.
Like a pause between songs on the radio.
But I didnât say any of that at the funeral.
I sat with my hands folded. I nodded at the right moments. I hugged people I hadnât seen since I was ten.
And I walked away with every unsaid word buried like folded notes in my coat pocket.
So here it is.
Everything I didnât say, written too late.
But maybe not too late for me.
Because grief is the love we didnât know how to give when someone was still around to receive it.
And writing this â maybe thatâs my way of giving it now.
If you're still listening, Grandpa...
Tap the roof of the sky for me.
Just three times.
For luck.
About the Creator
MIne Story Nest
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