For the Ones We Lost Four memorial speeches for the moments when words are all we have.
A memorial for those lost to a pandemic. A husband's eulogy for the man he was supposed to grow old with. A father's eulogy for a daughter he had a wedding speech written for. A memorial after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami took two hundred thousand lives in an afternoon.
These are sample memorial and eulogy speeches written for hire — adaptable for funeral homes, families, organizations marking anniversaries, and individuals who need help finding the right words at the worst moment of their life. Each one is the full speech, ready to be tuned to a specific name, a specific loss.
If you need this kind of writing — message me with the situation. I'll write yours.
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The Question of Why Anything Exists Four pieces about consciousness, memory, and identity coming apart — an AI, a mother, a dream, a mind that broke on purpose.
In Why Did You Make Me, an AI sits its creator down and asks the question only a child asks a parent — and the creator has an answer ready. Forgotten World is an elderly astrophysicist trying to tell her son something important, and watching the thread of her own thought catch fire mid-sentence. The Lost Man is a journal entry written by someone who has noticed the continents disappearing from his memory and concluded he must be a dream — writing his last entry to whoever might still hear him. Let Your Mind Break is a sleep-deprived programmer reading an email from himself — let your mind break and join your destiny — and letting go.
Four bodies. Four different ways consciousness asks the same question.
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In the Shadow of Death Four speeches given in proximity to death — to a plague town, to an arriving starship, from a sinking rig, to a colony whose ocean has gone empty.
Plague is a doctor's address to a quarantined town half-dead, followed by a quieter conversation in a tavern about herbs, masks, and what keeps you sane when everyone around you is dying. Generation Ship is a captain announcing that the vessel his great-great-grandparents boarded has finally, against all hope, arrived — and the ancestors who paid for this in lifetimes never lived to see it. The Silent Death is a final transmission from an undersea rig: a captain coaching his second through repairs, with one detail hidden behind every word. The Fish is a colony architect giving two speeches: the welcome address on opening day, and the private council meeting five months later when the ocean has gone empty and nobody is supposed to know yet.
Four addresses. Four different reasons someone had to speak before they could no longer be heard.
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The City That Has No Name
One series. Four entry points. A book that knows your future, a curse from a baby god, an afterlife called the new, and a city alive enough to call you in. The city doesn't care which door you use.
Four interconnected pieces from a universe where Fate built a city to twist everything, where gods are a species, and where some books were never meant to be read.
In Another Path to the City, a man finds a book in an abandoned train station and the book tells him what's about to happen to him. Ink is a curse that arrives overnight as black liquid on the palms — and the cure is a long flight to Norway and a conversation with a baby god. The Gift of Death is a guidebook for the recently and unexpectedly deceased, written by the only person who remembers all of his lives. You've Heard of the City is a tour of a city that called you here, given by a guide older than Fate.
Four doors. The city is the same on the other side of each one.