A Eulogy for a Grandparent
A Eulogy for a Grandparent
The Occasion
This is for the funeral or memorial service of a grandmother or grandfather, delivered by a grandchild to a room of family and close friends. The vibe is tender and dignified — warm enough to draw a quiet laugh, steady enough to hold the grief without collapsing into it. It honors a long life and a specific person, not a generic "wonderful grandparent." Plan for ~6 minutes (~850 words), which is the right length to say something true without asking a grieving room to sit too long.
The Speech
Thank you all for being here. I know [Grandparent's name] would have looked around this room, seen every one of you, and said something like "[a phrase they always said]" — and then put us all to work in the kitchen.
I'm [your name], and I had the enormous luck of being their grandchild. I want to take a few minutes to tell you who they were to me, because I think the small things say more than the big ones.
My grandparent was born in [year or place], and lived a life that spanned [number] years of change — [a brief detail, like "from a farm with no telephone to video calls every Sunday"]. They worked as a [their work or role], and they did it the way they did everything: without complaint, and better than they had to.
But that's the part you can read in a record book. Here is what I remember.
I remember [a specific small memory — a smell, a kitchen, a car ride, a saying]. I remember the way they [a specific habit — "saved every rubber band," "called me 'kiddo,'" "hummed while they cooked"]. I remember that they never once made me feel like I was in the way.
They taught me [one real lesson — patience, how to fish, that you finish what you start]. They didn't teach it with a speech. They taught it by [how they showed it]. That's the kind of teacher they were — you didn't notice the lesson until years later, when you caught yourself doing exactly what they did.
[Grandparent's name] loved [a person or people — "my grandmother," "this whole loud family"] with a steadiness that never wavered, even when the rest of life did. To love someone like that, for that long, is its own quiet kind of courage.
I won't pretend they were perfect. They were [a gentle, true imperfection — "stubborn as a mule," "convinced their way was the only way to load a dishwasher"]. And honestly, I loved them more for it. Perfect people are hard to miss. Real ones break your heart.
The hardest part of today is knowing there won't be another [a shared ritual — "Sunday dinner," "phone call on my birthday," "bad joke at the table"]. But the thing about a person like this is that they don't fully leave. They're in [where they live on — "my mother's laugh," "the recipe I'll never get quite right," "the way I'll talk to my own kids someday"].
So I'm not going to say goodbye. I'm going to say thank you. Thank you for [the one thing you're most grateful for]. We were lucky to be yours. Rest easy.
Make It Yours
- [Grandparent's name] / [a phrase they always said] — open with their actual name and a phrase the room will instantly recognize. This is the single most important swap; it tells everyone "this is *our* person." Swap-ins: a catchphrase, a nickname they called everyone, the thing they always said when you walked in the door.
- [a specific small memory] — pick one concrete, sensory moment, not a category. Not "we had fun" but "the way the whole car smelled like peppermints." Swap-ins: their kitchen, their hands, a sound they made.
- [one real lesson] / [how they showed it] — name a value they passed down and the wordless way they modeled it. Swap-ins: generosity, showing up, hard work, forgiveness.
- [a gentle, true imperfection] — one affectionate flaw. This is what turns a tribute into a portrait. Keep it loving; the room should smile.
Delivery Notes
- Read the first line, then pause and breathe before your name. Let the room settle.
- Slow down on the memory section — it's the heart, and your instinct under nerves will be to rush it.
- Expect your voice to catch on the imperfection line or the "thank you" line. That's allowed. Stop, breathe, keep going. No one wants you composed; they want you honest.
- Hold the page in both hands so shaking doesn't show. Look up on the final three lines if you can — say "We were lucky to be yours" to the room, not the paper.
- If you lose it completely, just stand there for a moment. Silence at a funeral is never wrong.
Variations
2-minute short version (condensed): Open with the name and their phrase. Skip the biography paragraph. Go straight to one memory — "I remember [the single memory]" — then the lesson, then close: *"I'm not going to say goodbye. I'm going to say thank you. We were lucky to be yours. Rest easy."*
Longer / more celebratory tone: After the imperfection line, add a second beat: *"Let me tell you about the time [a funny, beloved story]."* Let the room laugh fully before you bring it back down with *"That was them — and God, we'll miss it."* This works best when the death was expected and the life was long and full, and the family wants to celebrate more than mourn.
Bottom Line
Use this when you want to honor a real person, not a Hallmark grandparent. The one thing that makes it land: trade every general compliment for one specific, true memory — the specificity is the love.