The Unsaid · wing 06 of 10
Letters to the Dead
The conversation does not end. It changes address.
Back to the compassAt the mouth of this corridor · 11 doors
Death ends a life, not a relationship. The dead remain our listeners: we still explain ourselves to them, argue with them, ask their advice at the kitchen table. What we lose is not the conversation — it is the reply.
Writing to someone who has died is one of the oldest human rituals, and one of the most quietly effective. These guides will help you begin, whether you are finishing an interrupted sentence, saying the goodbye you never got to say, or simply telling them about your day.
Searching Letters to the Dead first.
The doors of this wing
Letters to the Dead
11 doors
- Letters to the Dead01
How to write a letter to someone who died
Grief therapists have used it for decades: the letter to the dead. Why writing to someone who died helps, what to say, and how to begin tonight.
grieflovelonging
Open this door - Letters to the Dead02
How to write a letter to a parent who died
You became someone they never met. How to write to a mother or father who died — the report, the questions, and the things only adults can say to parents.
grieflovelonging
Open this door - Letters to the Dead03
How to say what you never said before they died
The window closed with the words still inside you. Why 'too late' is not the end of the sentence — and how to deliver the unsaid to someone who has died.
regretgriefguilt
Open this door - Letters to the Dead04
How to grieve someone you never said goodbye to
Sudden loss steals the last scene. How to grieve without a goodbye — and how to write the farewell that circumstance denied you.
griefshocklonging
Open this door - Letters to the Dead05
How to write to a pet who died
The grief is real even when the world calls it 'just a pet'. How to write to an animal you loved — and why this loss deserves a letter, and a place.
griefloveloneliness
Open this door - Letters to the Dead06
How to write to a friend who died
Family gets the front pew; friends get the back rows and a lifetime of missing. How to write to a friend who died — the grief nobody thinks to rank.
grieflonelinesslove
Open this door - Letters to the Dead07
How to write to them on the days that hurt
The date does it every year — the birthday, the anniversary, the first snow. Why grief keeps its own calendar, and a standing letter for the days it circles.
grieflonginglove
Open this door - Letters to the Dead08
How to write a letter to a grandparent who died
Losing a grandparent is grief the world quietly waves through. How to write to a grandmother or grandfather who died — to keep the bond and report the life.
grieflovenostalgia
Open this door - Letters to the Dead09
How to write a letter to a child you lost
There is no harder letter, and no wrong way to write it. How to write to a child you lost — to miscarriage, stillbirth, or after — and keep being their parent.
grieflovelonging
Open this door - Letters to the Dead10
How to write the letter that goes with their things
Their sweater still hangs there, guarding its post. How to sort what they left behind — what to keep, what to release, and the letter that decides.
grieftendernessguilt
Open this door - Letters to the Dead11
How to write to someone who died by suicide
A grief tangled with guilt, anger, and an unanswerable why. How to write to someone you lost to suicide — the letter that holds what the mind can't.
griefguiltanger
Open this door
The threshold
The words have found their shape.
Now they may need a place.