You’ve learned to listen not just to what families say, but to what they mean. After years of sitting across from people in the hardest moments of their lives, you’ve developed an instinct for reading between the lines, hearing the anxiety behind a simple question, recognizing the guilt beneath a quick decision, understanding the family dynamics playing out in a moment of silence.
This isn’t about manipulation or sales tactics. It’s about the emotional intelligence you’ve built through experience. You already know these translations. This is just a reference for those moments when you need to remind yourself that what’s being said out loud is rarely the whole story.
1. When they say: “How much does that cost?”
What they often mean:
2. When they say: “We want something simple.”
What they often mean:
3. When they say: “What do most people choose?”
What they often mean:
4. When they say: “We’ll think about it.”
What they often mean:
5. When they say: “Is that really necessary?”
What they often mean:
6. When they say: “They were private.”
What they often mean:
7. When they say: “They wouldn’t want a fuss.”
What they often mean:
8. When they say: “They didn’t have many friends.”
What they often mean:
9. When they say: “We had a complicated relationship.”
What they often mean:
10. When they say: “I just saw them yesterday.”
What they often mean:
11. When they say: “I need to check with the rest of the family.”
What they often mean:
12. When they say: “My siblings will want a say in this.”
What they often mean:
13. When they say: “This is what Mom would have wanted.”
What they often mean:
14. When they say: “Can we do this another day?”
What they often mean:
15. When they say: “Just do whatever you think is best.”
What they often mean:
16. When they say: “We’re not religious.”
What they often mean:
17. When they say: “Can we have the service soon?”
What they often mean:
18. When they say: “We want it to be a celebration of life.”
What they often mean:
19. When they say: “Should we do a viewing?”
What they often mean:
20. When they say: “Who usually speaks at these?”
What they often mean:
21. When they say: “I’m fine.”
What they often mean:
22. When they say: “I should have done more.”
What they often mean:
23. When they say: “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do.”
What they often mean:
24. When they say: “This doesn’t feel real.”
What they often mean:
25. When they say: “Everyone keeps asking if I’m okay.”
What they often mean:
You’ve already learned these translations through experience. You know when silence means confusion, when a quick 'yes' means overwhelm, when a change of subject means something just became too painful to discuss.
This list isn’t teaching you anything new—it’s validating what you already know. That listening is more than hearing words. That families often can’t say what they really mean in the moment. That your job is to understand what they need, even when they can’t articulate it.
You’ve developed this skill because you’ve been present for hundreds of families in their most vulnerable moments. You’ve learned that what people say in grief is often a translation of something deeper—fear, guilt, confusion, love, regret, or simply the overwhelming weight of loss.
Trust what you already know. You’re better at this than you think.