Being asked to write funeral eulogies is a great honor. It is one last gift that you can give to the deceased and his or her loved ones.
But unless you are an experienced public speaker and speechwriter, preparing and delivering the eulogy can be a daunting task. The process is further complicated by the fact that you are dealing with your own grief. But what if you you found that planning ahead would involve you writing your own eulogy? What would you say or want said? These are the things that need to be thought of, whether the eulogy be for your future self or for a dearly departed loved one.
Here we've listed some techniques for writing funeral eulogies that will help you get started to crafting it all out.
Funeral Eulogies
Getting Started
When looking to craft a eulogy, It is helpful to remember the reason for the eulogy. You are paying homage to the deceased, acknowledging the importance of a unique life (your own included), and capturing some of the memories left behind. If you prepare the eulogy with this in mind and you deliver it with honesty, love, and respect, you can’t go wrong.
As you are preparing the eulogy, keep in mind that you may be dealing with your own grief so the process may become emotional. If you need to, take a break to let yourself work through your feelings. You’ll be able to get back to it once you have caught your breath.
Talk It Over
Spend time with family and friends sharing stories, telling tales, and reflecting on the life of the deceased. Ask questions so that you get a full picture of the person’s life—from the happy, to the funny, to the unusual. Jot down key highlights that might give you inspiration as you begin to write.
Make A List
Write down your impressions and stories that might work well for the occasion. Note what was important to the deceased. How did he or she like to spend time? Did he have hobbies? Did she have special interests? Was there music that was special, food, activities? Don’t leave anything out. Right now you are just trying to capture ideas, memories, and perspectives.
Develop A Theme
Start thinking about how the anecdotes might fit together. Keep the personality of the deceased in mind. There are a variety of themes that may begin to surface. Often times, a eulogy will contain a blending of themes. For example, you might start out by reflecting on some of the serious passions that were important to the person you are eulogizing and then work in some humorous stories. Or you might choose to set the eulogy up by asking a question or telling one particular story that you think sums up the life of the person you are writing about. The overriding theme will tie your eulogy together.
Create An Outline
Begin to organize your thoughts. Creating a written outline can be helpful in organizing what you will say. Popular ways to organize include chronological or reverse chronological, by topic (perhaps three or four important points), or by the overriding theme. For example, there may be a quote, scripture, poem, or song lyric that you feel sums up the person’s life.
Start Writing
With your outline at the ready (or in your head) you are ready to start writing. The important thing is to get started. It doesn’t have to be perfect. You’ll refine and edit later. Try to keep it conversational by writing the way you would say it.
Edit
Now that you have a completed draft read your work out loud. That will give you a feel for how the eulogy will flow and how it will sound when you deliver it. Add, delete, rearrange the wording as you go along. \
Get Feedback
Share an edited draft with others to get feedback and suggestions. Edit the eulogy to reflect the comments made by others.
Practice
Even the most expert public speakers practice their funeral eulogies before they deliver them. Practice will give you the chance to make sure the eulogy is the right tone and length. Most are 10-15 minutes long. If you aren’t sure how long it should be, check with the person making the funeral arrangements.
Delivering The Eulogy
You’ve talked with family and friends, developed a theme, and done the work of preparing a eulogy. Now comes the most important part–delivering it.
This is also the part that may weigh most heavily on your mind.
Chances are you are not a polished public speaker, you are also working to manage your own grief over the loss of a loved one. Fortunately, there are things you can do to help make what’s up ahead easier.
Practice, practice, practice: The more you practice delivering the eulogy the easier it will become. While you may not end up committing it to memory, your brain will know what’s coming. Use a mirror so you can see what the audience will see and practice in front of others. Practicing out loud will also help you fine tune some areas of the eulogy that may look good on paper but not flow easily when said.
Relax: Of course, this is easier said than done but taking steps like familiarizing yourself with the room and podium, wearing comfortable but appropriate clothing, having water available, and taking deep breaths can help.
Put yourself in the audience’s place: Remember, you will never have a more sympathetic audience. The delivery is your gift to them and they are grateful. They will appreciate your willingness to speak.
Have a backup: If you aren’t sure how you are going to feel on the day of the funeral, ask a friend or family member to stand by in case you are unable to go through with the delivery. Just knowing you have a fallback can help ease your mind.
Handling Your Emotions When Delivering a Eulogy
The death of a loved one is a stressful and emotional time. Dealing with the loss under normal circumstances is difficult enough. However, adding the extra task of giving the eulogy is particularly challenging. Your audience will not be shocked if you get emotional. In fact, they will probably expect it. If you have a tough spot or two, just pause and take a do-over. All that matters is that you say what you need to say.
The more you practice, the more comfortable you will feel with the words you are expressing. The repetition can help remove the emotion and make you more confident in delivering your message.
If you are particularly concerned about maintaining your composure, consider avoiding eye contact with the audience. There will be guests that will react emotionally to parts of your message or just to the funeral itself. Emotion is contagious. Instead of looking the guests in the eyes, try to look just above the audience or just at the audience as a whole.
Speak slowly. During your speech, there will be some parts that will evoke emotion more than others. If you are concentrating on the flow of your speech, you will not be thinking as much about the emotionally charged parts of your speech.
Dealing with emotions is normal when giving a eulogy. Do not let it scare you from the job. When the guests see you dealing with the same grief that they are, they will feel connected to you and the eulogy.
If you were to write your own eulogy, what would it say? Who would you designate to deliver it? These are the things we ask that many will not have the answers to. Pre-plan all this by scheduling at a time that best suits you to meet with our in-house life and legacy pre-need specialist. Feel free to find a date and time online. We'll work around your life so you can easily plan your everlasting legacy with us at Guam Windward Memorial.
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