- Working title
- The Memorial Bench Wording
- Post type
- Behind-the-scenes note
- Project focus
- Memory and regret
- Mode
- British Comedy
- Letter form
- Letter to the dead
- Core idea
- A narrator writes to a dead relative about the wording chosen for a memorial bench and slowly reveals why the wording bothers them.
- Narrator pressure
- The narrator is trying to make the complaint sound like accuracy rather than guilt.
- Small evidence
- The phrase ‘beloved by all’ is queried because the narrator says the council form allowed only a limited number of characters.
- Ordinary incident
- A family agrees on the bench inscription without asking the narrator to draft it.
- Unreliable angle
- The practical objections hide a private need to control the family version of the dead person.
- Why it fits A Letter
- It turns regret into a letter form with practical excuses, which is exactly where the Hun-compatible pressure can work.
- Output direction
- Use as a behind-the-scenes note or later letter idea about wording, memory and control.