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# If You Don't Tell His Stories, No One Else Will Ever Know Him

- Published: 2026-04-07
- Updated: 2026-06-02
- Author: [The Dead Dads Podcast](https://agents.deaddadspodcast.com/author/the-dead-dads-podcast)

> Silence after losing your dad isn

Most men don't fall apart when their dad dies. They go back to work. They show up for their family. They keep things moving. And somewhere in all that forward momentum, they stop saying his name — and slowly, without noticing, he starts to disappear.

That's not grief. That's not coping. That's erosion.

## The Silence Isn't Strength

There's a version of loss that doesn't look like loss at all. No breakdown. No moment where everything stops. Life just continues — because life does that, regardless of what you've been through. You answer emails. You coach the soccer game. You fix the thing in the kitchen that needed fixing. And you tell yourself you're fine, because you're functioning.

This is exactly what Bill Cooper described in his conversation with Roger and Scott on Dead Dads. Bill lost his dad, Frank — a British-born doctor who built a life in Canada — after years of watching dementia slowly take him. There was no final moment of clarity. No goodbye that felt like a goodbye. Just a long, slow departure, and then a death that didn't hit the way he expected.

So Bill did what a lot of men do. He kept moving. No dramatic reaction. No tearful confessions to friends. Just life, continuing.

And that looked fine from the outside. The problem is what was happening underneath.

When you stop talking about your dad, you're not protecting yourself. You're not being stoic. You're dismantling him, piece by piece, without realizing it. The stories stop. The references dry up. Someone asks what he was like, and you give them a one-liner — "he was a good guy" — and change the subject. Because the fuller answer takes effort, and the effort costs something, and you've already decided today isn't the day to pay that price.

Do that enough times and something shifts. He stops being a person in your daily life. He becomes a fact. "My dad passed a few years ago." Said and done.

The thing about that kind of silence is it doesn't feel like a choice. It feels like moving on. And moving on feels correct. It feels like the mature thing, the responsible thing. The grief books say to find acceptance. Acceptance looks a lot like not dwelling. Not dwelling looks a lot like not mentioning.

But there's a difference between not dwelling and not speaking. One is peace. The other is forgetting.

Your kids feel that difference, even if they can't name it. They grow up with a shadow where a person should be. Papa becomes a photograph, a birth date, maybe a middle name if you went that route. The actual man — his opinions, his contradictions, his habits, his voice — that all disappears when you decide the stories aren't worth telling. Not on purpose. Just by default.

If you've ever caught yourself wondering whether your children would recognize who their grandfather actually was — not the idea of him, but the real, specific, sometimes difficult, occasionally absurd human being — that feeling is worth paying attention to. It's telling you something.

## Memory Fades. Stories Don't.

Here's what's different about a story versus a feeling: a story travels.

You can carry a feeling about your dad privately for years. The warmth when you think about him. The specific ache when his birthday rolls around. That's real, and it matters, and no one can take it from you. But it stays inside you. It doesn't move. Your kids can't hold it. Your grandkids will never know it existed.

A story, though — a specific, concrete story with a beginning and a detail that makes someone laugh or wince — that thing can go places. It can outlive the feeling that created it. It can land in a seven-year-old's memory and sit there for sixty years.

Scott Cunningham, co-host of Dead Dads, talks about this with a clarity that's hard to argue with. His dad became synonymous with Dairy Queen. Not a monument to grief. Not a formal tribute. Just a place. A ritual that started because of who his dad was and what they did together. Now Scott's kids ask about it weeks in advance — "Is it time to go to Dairy Queen yet? When was Papa born again?" — and in asking that question, they're keeping a man alive they may barely remember or never fully knew.

That's a story doing exactly what stories are supposed to do. It's not a eulogy. It's not a TED Talk about legacy. It's a Blizzard order and a birthday and a question a kid asks in the backseat of a car. And it works.

The bar for a story worth telling is much lower than most men realize. You don't need a cinematic moment. You don't need something that would hold up in a speech. "He drove 45 minutes to fix my furnace without being asked" is a story. "He always burned the toast and acted like that was how toast was supposed to taste" is a story. "He never missed a game, but he also never shut up during the game" is a story.

These specific, small details are the things that make someone a person rather than a placeholder. They're what separates "my grandfather was a good man" from "my grandfather was the kind of guy who..." That gap is everything. Because the second version is someone your kids can actually picture.

## Why Men Stop — And What It Costs

The reasons men go quiet about their dads aren't mysterious. Talking about him means feeling it. Feeling it in front of other people means not being in control of that. And not being in control of that feels like a vulnerability most men have been trained since childhood to avoid.

So you develop a working relationship with the memory — you know it's there, you don't poke it, you keep going. It's not denial exactly. It's more like an arrangement.

The arrangement works, up to a point. It gets you through the first year. It gets you through the holidays. It makes you functional and reliable and present for the people who need you. That's not nothing.

But the arrangement has a cost that shows up later. You find out you can't remember the sound of his laugh as clearly as you used to. You realize you've stopped telling the stories you used to tell, and now you're not sure you could reconstruct them with the same detail. You notice your kids know his name but not much else — and some part of you knows that's on you.

The silence that felt like strength was quietly spending down a balance you didn't know you had.

This is what Bill Cooper's episode on Dead Dads circles around without ever being preachy about it. Not every loss looks like a breakdown. Some guys just continue. And the real question isn't whether you cried — it's whether, five years later, the people you love most could tell you a real story about who your dad was. Not a fact. A story.

If the answer is no, the silence got there before you did.

## How to Start Talking Again

Nobody's asking you to give a speech. The bar isn't a documentary about your dad's life or a sit-down conversation you've planned out in advance. The bar is the next time his name could naturally come up — take it.

Your kid sees an old pickup truck that looks like the one your dad drove. Say something. Don't just let the moment pass.

You're grilling, and something reminds you of the way he always overcooked chicken but defended it like a religion. Say it out loud.

You're at a hardware store — and if you've heard enough Dead Dads episodes, you know exactly why hardware stores hit differently after your dad dies — and you notice the same brand of tool he swore by. Tell whoever's next to you why.

These aren't grief exercises. They're just conversations. Small ones. The kind that don't require anything from you except the willingness to not let the moment go quiet.

The Dairy Queen ritual Scott describes didn't start as a memorial. It started as a thing they did. Over time, it became the mechanism through which his kids ask about their grandfather — not because someone designed it that way, but because a simple, repeated story created the opening. That's what you're building when you tell even the smallest story. You're leaving a door open.

For the men who want to think about this more deliberately — about how to carry him forward without turning it into a project — [How to Carry Your Father's Legacy Forward Without Forcing It](https://pendium.ai/deaddadspodcast/the-fatherless-manual/how-to-carry-your-father-s-legacy-forward-without--849dd2) goes deeper into that territory. The mechanics, the permission to make it imperfect, the way it happens over time rather than all at once.

And if you have kids and you've been wondering what your silence might actually be communicating to them, [What Your Kids Inherit When You Stop Talking About Your Dad](https://pendium.ai/deaddadspodcast/the-fatherless-manual/what-your-kids-inherit-when-you-stop-talking-about-8c5d4b) is worth reading. What they inherit from your grief isn't just the emotional weight of it — it's the model for how they'll handle loss when it comes for them.

## He Can't Tell It Himself

There's a line worth sitting with: if you don't tell his stories, no one will. Not because people don't care — but because no one else has them. The specific version of him that existed in relation to you lives only with you. The way he talked to you specifically. What he said when you were in trouble. What he said when you were proud. The look on his face at a moment nobody photographed.

That stuff doesn't exist anywhere else. It doesn't have a backup. When you go quiet, it goes quiet with you.

That's not a guilt trip. It's just the math of how memory works. The people who remember him are the only archive he has. And archives, when they go unused, don't preserve. They decay.

You don't have to be a storyteller. You don't have to be eloquent. You just have to be the person who says his name — casually, specifically, without making it a whole thing — often enough that the people around you grow up knowing who he actually was.

He did the rest of the work. The stories are already there. You just have to be willing to tell them.

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