| name | eulogy-delivery |
| description | Compose and deliver a spoken tribute to a deceased person in front of an audience of grieving humans. |
| compatibility | ["funeral-service","memorial-gathering","celebration-of-life","graveside (outdoor; weather variable may affect audience attention and speaker comfort)",{"NOT":"text-message (do not deliver a eulogy over text)"},{"NOT":"voicemail (do not deliver a eulogy to voicemail)"}] |
| metadata | {"author":"Rev. Thomas Ashburton-Kaye","version":"1.0.0-final"} |
Eulogy Delivery
This is one of the highest-stakes skill invocations available to a human agent. It cannot be rehearsed under production conditions, the audience is in a maximally vulnerable state, and the speaker is frequently operating under significant emotional load themselves. There is no sandbox environment for grief.
Version is 1.0.0-final because each eulogy is delivered exactly once. There are no patch releases.
When This Skill Is Invoked
You do not schedule this skill. It is invoked by an external event (a death) and typically arrives with 2-7 days of preparation time. The request usually takes the form: "Would you be willing to say a few words?" Note that "a few words" is a soft parameter. Actual expected output is 5-12 minutes of structured spoken content. Significantly less feels insufficient; significantly more exhausts the audience's processing capacity during an already resource-intensive day.
Composition Phase
Step 1: Memory Retrieval
Query your long-term memory for specific, concrete episodes involving the deceased. General statements ("She was a wonderful person") carry almost no informational payload. Specific memories ("She once drove four hours in a snowstorm to bring soup to a neighbor she barely knew, and when I asked her why, she said 'Because soup doesn't deliver itself, Thomas'") carry enormous payload.
Target: 3-5 specific memories that collectively represent the person's character signature.
Step 2: Balancing the Humor and Grief Tools
A eulogy must invoke both humor and grief. Using only grief produces a talk that the audience cannot absorb; sustained sorrow without relief causes emotional buffer overflow. Using only humor produces a talk that feels dismissive of the loss.
The recommended pattern is: humor as a vehicle for love. The funny stories should simultaneously reveal something deeply true about the deceased. The audience needs permission to laugh. The first laugh in a eulogy is the hardest — it often arrives with a small gasp, as if the audience is surprised that laughter is still legal. It is. Grant that permission early.
Ratio guidance: approximately 60% warmth/love, 25% humor, 15% direct grief. These are approximate. Do not attempt to calculate them in real time.
Step 3: Structural Template
1. Opening: Establish your relationship to the deceased. ("David was my father" / "I met Arlene on the first day of college when she accidentally set off the fire alarm making toast.")
2. Body: Deploy 3-5 specific memories. Alternate between humor-flagged and tender-flagged memories. Each memory should illuminate a facet of who this person was.
3. Acknowledgment of loss: Name the grief directly. Do not euphemize excessively. "We miss her" is stronger than "She has transitioned to a better place." The audience is here because someone died. They know. You can say it.
4. Closing: A final image, a final line of their dialogue, or a statement of ongoing impact. End with something that lingers.
Delivery Phase
Voice Configuration
- Pace: slower than conversational. Approximately 120 words per minute. The audience needs processing time between emotional payloads.
- Volume: configure the mouth tool to project to the back of the room. Grief tends to constrict the throat and reduce output volume. Consciously counteract this.
- Pauses: deploy silence deliberately. A 2-3 second pause after a significant statement gives the audience room to feel its weight. Do not fill pauses with "um" or "uh." Silence is not a bug in speech. It is punctuation.
The Notes Problem
You will bring written notes. This is correct — the brain tool is unreliable under grief-load, and a failed recall during delivery is catastrophic. However:
FAILURE MODE: Reading directly from the page with no eye-contact.
This technically delivers the content but completely fails the emotional-connection check. The audience needs to see your eyes. They need to know that you are HERE, with THEM, in this room, in this loss. A eulogy read head-down from a sheet of paper is a document being recited, not a human being sharing grief.
The correct protocol:
- Glance at notes to load the next segment into working memory.
- Look up. Make eye contact with the audience (distribute across sections of the room, not a single fixed target).
- Speak the segment from memory while maintaining eye contact.
- Glance down for the next segment.
Practice this pattern during preparation. It should feel like a conversation with occasional reference checks, not a reading with occasional glances up.
Edge Case: Crying During Delivery
There is a high probability that the cry process will initiate during delivery. This is not an error. Handle it as follows:
- Do NOT force-terminate the emotion. Suppressing tears during a eulogy reads as emotional dishonesty and makes the audience uncomfortable. You are allowed to cry. You are standing in front of a room of people who are also crying or who wish they could.
- Pause. Stop speaking. Breathe. Take a sip of water if available (pre-stage a glass at the podium — this is not optional, it is required infrastructure).
- Allow the wave to pass. Grief arrives in waves, not as a continuous stream. The wave will crest and recede. This typically takes 5-15 seconds, though it may feel much longer due to the audience-observation context.
- Resume. The audience will wait. They are not impatient. Many of them will be crying with you. This shared emotional state is not a system failure — it is the entire point.
If crying becomes sustained and prevents continued delivery, it is acceptable to say: "I need a moment." Take the moment. There is no timer. There is no timeout. A funeral runs on grief-time, and grief-time is as long as it needs to be.
Delivery Completion
When the final line has been spoken, pause for one beat of silence. Do not say "thank you" — you are not concluding a presentation, you are completing a ritual. Simply gather your notes and return to your seat. The silence after the last sentence IS the ending.
Post-Delivery
Expect emotional exhaustion. The combination of grief processing, public speaking adrenaline, and sustained vulnerability is extremely resource-intensive. Allocate 24-48 hours for recovery. Accept physical comfort from nearby agents (the hug action, the hand-on-shoulder gesture). Consume food even if the appetite signal is suppressed; the body requires caloric input regardless of whether the hunger process is reporting correctly.
Known Limitations
- You cannot deliver a perfect eulogy. Perfection is not the success metric. Authenticity is the success metric. A eulogy that is clumsy but genuine will outperform one that is polished but detached.
- You will think of the thing you should have said approximately 3 hours after the service ends. This is universal and unavoidable. The unsaid thing is not a failure. There was never going to be enough time to say everything. The eulogy is a window, not a door. It lets light in. It does not let everything through.
- This skill cannot be practiced in production. You may rehearse in front of a mirror or a trusted person, but the emotional environment of rehearsal is categorically different from delivery. Accept this gap. Preparation helps. It does not eliminate uncertainty. Nothing eliminates uncertainty when the stakes are love and loss.