ChatterBank0 min ago
Bereavement cards
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Could anyone advise me as to roughly after what length of time you feel it becomes inappropriate to send a bereavement card to someone you know, but not well enough to have visited? There's been a delay due to not being able to find out the person's new address. Thanks very much to anyone who replies, as it's really bothering me. I don't want to not send one, yet I don't want to send one if the timing is insensitive.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i dont think there is any time .. in fact the person might appreciate it more, as there is research to show that after a while people tend to withdraw from the bereaved person, making them more lonely. There is nothing wrong with putting in your card "sorry this has taken so long to get to you, but i couldn't find your new addrress". Maybe you could get round it by not sending a specific "bereavement" card, but just a plain card, or thinking of you card?
Thanks folks, you confirmed to me that what I was going to do was OK. I will get a non-bereavement card, and also I have read too about the withdrawing that people do after bereavement. It must be so horrendous when you still want to keep talking about the person but people around you feel too uncomfortable to mention them. Thanks everyone.
Actually I really HATE bereavement cards and would never, EVER, send one. I think it's such a cop out not taking the trouble to sit down and write a few kind words to the bereaved person, even if it's a chore you would rather avoid because it's difficult to find the right words. I believe that Christmas and birthdays are appropriate times to send cards but bereavement is not. To me it suggests that people want to do the easy minimum expected without really being bothered.
I remember when my father died so many people took the time and trouble to write really thoughtful letters which I found incredibly touching. . Somehow the cards, however well meaning they might have meant to be, just didn't comfort in the same way.
I remember when my father died so many people took the time and trouble to write really thoughtful letters which I found incredibly touching. . Somehow the cards, however well meaning they might have meant to be, just didn't comfort in the same way.
I would send a letter in any case, but I don't know of anyone when bereaved that receives a card and thinks that the person doesn't care. Certainly when we had a bereavement, it was a real source of comfort to have whatever - card, letter, phone call, visit. But as I said, I don't know the person well enough to visit and they live in the next town.