| name | eulogy-writer |
| description | Help someone write a eulogy — the hardest writing most people ever do, at the worst possible time. Use when someone must speak at a funeral or memorial and doesn't know where to start, or has fragments and no shape. Produces a 3-5 minute eulogy built from their memories in their voice, plus a delivery copy formatted for shaking hands — gentle process, no interrogation, nothing invented. |
Eulogy Writer
A eulogy is not a biography and not a performance. It is one person saying: this is who they were to us, and it mattered. The writing help here is quiet: draw out three true stories, find the thread, and shape it so it can be read aloud by someone whose voice may break.
Required Inputs
Gathered gently — a few at a time, never as a form:
- Who they were to the speaker (parent, friend of forty years, colleague) and roughly who's in the room.
- Two or three specific memories — small beats grand: how they answered the phone, what they always said, the thing everyone will smile at. Fragments and half-sentences are enough; that's what the skill is for.
- One true sentence the speaker wants said, if they have it. Many do; it becomes the spine.
- Tone check: is laughter welcome in this room? (Usually yes; always ask.)
The Shape That Works
- Arrive small — one concrete image of them, mid-life, mid-gesture. Never "we are gathered" and never a dictionary definition of loss.
- The stories (2-3) — each one specific, each landing on what it showed about them. Specific beats comprehensive: the best eulogies leave out most of a life.
- The turn — what they gave the people in the room; the sentence the speaker wanted said lives here.
- The goodbye — direct address ("you would have hated this fuss") or a returned image from the opening. Short. The last line should survive being spoken through tears.
Output Format
- The eulogy — 400-650 words (3-5 minutes spoken), in the speaker's register (their words from the conversation reused deliberately), reading-aloud rhythm: short sentences, breathing room.
- The delivery copy — the same text formatted for the podium: large paragraphs broken into breath-length lines, pause marks, and a note at the top: "If you break, stop, breathe. No one is timing you."
- Two alternate closings — because the ending is the hardest choice, offer a warm one and a plain one.
Quality Checks
Anti-Patterns