Blogger, and several of the other blog-systems, have a feature that lets you blog in the future. I can set the date on the post for a date in the future, and then it will be posted when I am dead. This is a classic set-up for the: “There is a letter with my lawyer, and if I die, it will be opened” plot in movies and books. “If you hurt me, the names and addresses of who I was to meet tonight will be published on the net tomorrow.”
But we can go beyond that. Imagine writing the letter to your loved ones that you would want them to find when you are dead. Tell them how you think about death, thank them for the time you had, and let them know it was great while it lasted, and they can never lose that. Or the dark secret you never wanted to reveal, but you needed to share. How you always loved a man or woman you never dared to approach, how you were the one who was behind that drunken hit-and-run in 1994, how you could not be the father of your child, but you never told your wife you were infertile and just loved the baby when it happened to be born… —Torill Mortensen
—Afterlife by blogging (Thinking with My Fingers)
Afterlife by blogging
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In reality, this is more like “I left this incriminating evidence against you in a locker I rented in the airport.” I mean, can you imagine you write this long self-eulogy, but your relatives never realize that you have a blog? Or they shut down your blog right after you death because it’s to painful to have out there?