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Eulogy Writing Tips
This is a
difficult time for relatives and friends of
a special person who has passed on. And
delivering a first rate eulogy is essential
not only in honoring the deceased but it
also acts as a reference point for the
relatives and friends.
Because, long after the eulogy and funeral
service is over, the main points and theme
of the eulogy will be remembered and
associated with that special person.
So I'd like to offer a few tips that I used
in preparing a eulogy to honor my Mother's
recent passing.
Consider a Theme
When I wrote my mother's eulogy, it began as
an ad-hoc report of what my mother's
guidance and parenting meant to me and my
sisters. But eventually I settled on
the theme of breaking the cycle of poverty.
Mom lived in dire poverty as a young girl in
Jamaica and later as a teen in Belize where
I was born. After my father's untimely death
she left us with relatives and came to
America. She then re-married and acquired
her Dental Assistant's certification from
the ADAA.
So after few years she brought all of us to
live with her in Chicago where I attended
grammar school through Chicago State
University. While growing up mom was very
adamant that we would do well in school and
we did, along with her checking our grammar
school homework nightly!
So obviously I settled on the theme of
breaking the cycle of poverty she had to
endure as a child and a sub-theme of the
importance of stressing a good education for
your children.
My point is, to consider the aspects of the
special person's life or personality that
would be the most cherished and remembered.
And draft a report based on those topics
centering on what you consider to be the
most important aspect that should be
remembered.

A Eulogy To Remember
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Accomplishments and Important Events
As you write your first draft you may
remember certain accomplishments and special
events in the life of your special person.
In my case, I didn't have all the dates and
places assembled, but I continued writing
because you can loose your chain of thought.
So it can be a plus to assemble important
documents and relevant information ahead of
time. But if you didn't as I did, you can
always update your eulogy later. The
important thing is to get started and not
let minor things distract you in the
process.
Depending on the nature of the eulogy, you
don't want it to turn out to be a long
winded listing of all the accomplishments or
a biography. You basically want to assemble
the necessary documents and information that
will be in line with the theme you chose to
expound upon.
Finalizing Your Eulogy
After you're satisfied with your first
draft, have another person or two including
a non-relative read and critique your
eulogy. You may get some good feedback on
areas you may not have considered.
Then practice speaking the eulogy if you're
going to make the address at the funeral
service. It can help you to maybe
re-organize the eulogy and to learn areas
you may want to stress during the reading.
If you think you'll be too emotionally
overcome, select someone who is good at
public speaking.
Overall, you want to be certain your eulogy
will adequately honor your loved one and be
a blessing to those present. You want to
have a frame of mind that you'll send them
off with positive thoughts of caring and
appreciation.
And most of all, refrain from pointing
fingers for the negative parts of this
person's experience. Better to outline the
positive life experience lessons your
special person learned as a result of the
trials we all will face in life.
Mom's Eulogy
Click
here to see the eulogy I wrote to honor my
mother's passing in
Microsoft Word format. |