Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People sometimes ask me how many siblings I have. I say 6, 5 living. It is unusual for them to ask follow up questions. When they do, I keep it short.
+1
NTFB.
Anonymous wrote:People sometimes ask me how many siblings I have. I say 6, 5 living. It is unusual for them to ask follow up questions. When they do, I keep it short.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember you never owe anyone an answer or explanation
I’m sorry, PP
+1
Same here, and it really was in their sleep (ie: no drugs and no foul play - proven by PD). People always want to assume the worst, ort at least that you have it as bad as them.
Eff them, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Just remember you never owe anyone an answer or explanation
I’m sorry, PP
Anonymous wrote:A week ago we were at church and after church attended a luncheon. A friend of ours was visiting and went with us. His wife died of cancer in October after it was discovered at the end of August. Many, many people were unaware that 1) she had cancer, and 2) that she died. This friend and his wife were well known in our community. I cannot tell you how many people saw him and innocently asked "Where's Larla? I want to see her!" Our friend simply said "I am sorry to tell you that Larla passed away in October, not related to Covid. It was very sudden and I really don't feel like talking about it right now. Thank you for understanding." Every single person who heard that, including some of our busiest busybodies, honored that request.
My point is that many posters here are assuming that everyone knows that your spouse or sibling or child has died. Many people don't. When they ask after that person, try to remember that they probably have good intentions, not bad. And understand that of course they are going to be shocked if they thought your loved one was alive and they just found out the loved one is deceased. Most people don't set out to be a-holes. So if you have someone in your life who is deceased, and you don't want to talk about it, come up with what you're going to say and then keep repeating to yourself that they didn't know it was going to upset you because, you know, they didn't.
I am sorry for your loss, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry for your loss. It is incredibly rude for people to ask follow up questions or keep pressing when when it’s clear you don’t want to talk about it. I think saying whatever you need to say is just fine, even if it’s not the truth.
Personally, I found it is easier for me to give a factual, blunt answer and then explicitly say I don’t want to talk about it. In my case ‘he died suddenly in his sleep 6 months ago from an undiagnosed heart condition, and I would rather not talk about it.’ And then I immediately change the subject or say I have to leave to cut off all the ‘I’m so sorry, how is his wife’ etc because I just don’t want to deal with it. I have found that people are just so damn curious and nosey, just saying ‘he passed away’ pretty much invariably brought questions about when and why, and I would rather just say it once clearly and be done. No one is owed this information, but I also have no particular reason for keeping it secret, so this works for me.
Yep, this. Also, if you're truly interested in protecting your privacy, you should lie.
Although I never ask nosy questions about someone's death, I think it is natural to be curious when a young, seemingly healthy person passes away. If you give some of the answers on this thread, know that you're pretty much ANNOUNCING that your sibling OD'd or killed themselves.
You can just fudge the truth a little or a lot. Accidental OD can become an "undiagnosed heart condition," since many OD's cause heart attacks. Suicide can become something else brain related, like a stroke a stroke or aneurism. Like PP said, follow it up with, "I would rather not talk about it."
Anonymous wrote:First, I’m truly sorry for your loss.
Any person who goes beyond ‘I’m so sorry to hear that, please let me know if I can help with xxx’ after you simply reply ‘my sibling passed away in January’ is beyond rude.
A simple, direct ‘Larla passed away in January’ is ALL you need to say. If they are rude and follow up with more questions, simply say ‘I really don’t want to talk about it.’ That’s it. If they push further, you would not be rude to simply walk away
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry for your loss. It is incredibly rude for people to ask follow up questions or keep pressing when when it’s clear you don’t want to talk about it. I think saying whatever you need to say is just fine, even if it’s not the truth.
Personally, I found it is easier for me to give a factual, blunt answer and then explicitly say I don’t want to talk about it. In my case ‘he died suddenly in his sleep 6 months ago from an undiagnosed heart condition, and I would rather not talk about it.’ And then I immediately change the subject or say I have to leave to cut off all the ‘I’m so sorry, how is his wife’ etc because I just don’t want to deal with it. I have found that people are just so damn curious and nosey, just saying ‘he passed away’ pretty much invariably brought questions about when and why, and I would rather just say it once clearly and be done. No one is owed this information, but I also have no particular reason for keeping it secret, so this works for me.
Yep, this. Also, if you're truly interested in protecting your privacy, you should lie.
Although I never ask nosy questions about someone's death, I think it is natural to be curious when a young, seemingly healthy person passes away. If you give some of the answers on this thread, know that you're pretty much ANNOUNCING that your sibling OD'd or killed themselves.
You can just fudge the truth a little or a lot. Accidental OD can become an "undiagnosed heart condition," since many OD's cause heart attacks. Suicide can become something else brain related, like a stroke a stroke or aneurism. Like PP said, follow it up with, "I would rather not talk about it."
Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry for your loss. It is incredibly rude for people to ask follow up questions or keep pressing when when it’s clear you don’t want to talk about it. I think saying whatever you need to say is just fine, even if it’s not the truth.
Personally, I found it is easier for me to give a factual, blunt answer and then explicitly say I don’t want to talk about it. In my case ‘he died suddenly in his sleep 6 months ago from an undiagnosed heart condition, and I would rather not talk about it.’ And then I immediately change the subject or say I have to leave to cut off all the ‘I’m so sorry, how is his wife’ etc because I just don’t want to deal with it. I have found that people are just so damn curious and nosey, just saying ‘he passed away’ pretty much invariably brought questions about when and why, and I would rather just say it once clearly and be done. No one is owed this information, but I also have no particular reason for keeping it secret, so this works for me.