Unread LINE September 3 21:41

“My wife sent a LINE to my dead father and sometimes I looked happily,“ I wonder if I could read it. ”This wife is okay. Do n’t listen to it.”

This casual tweet has led to a series of posts that have sent e-mails and SNS messages to their parents and friends who died. A message that should never be "read". What are your thoughts? (Network reporter reporter Ken Megida Yohei Kato)

It ’s hard to read already.

Mr. Nobuyuki Isshiki tweeted. He is a screenwriter for movies, TV dramas, stage works, etc. that worked on the movies “We are all alive” and “Take me to ski”.

Mr. Isshiki who answered the interview. When he lost his father in July and surrounded the dining table, he said, “I can't read it easily,” he said and posted his wife who sent LINE to his father. It was still a short time since my father died.

“It was a time when I couldn't organize my feelings, but I felt grateful to see the relationship between my wife and father who were sending LINE casually.” (Mr. Isshiki)

If you look from above the sky

This post spreads in an instant, with over 16,000 retweets as of September 3rd. Many people responded and replied with similar experiences.

“My father has a LINE every day for his deceased mother.
"I was also sending photos to my friend's messenger who died suddenly."

Unreliable message to be read. Unreliable photos that can be seen. It was a post saying that he was sending daily thoughts to the other party while knowing that he would not reach.

“I ’ve never read it, but I hope you ’ve seen it from the sky.”
“I know it ’s unrealistic, but I ’m always dreaming.”

Some people expressed their feelings of sending words and thoughts to the dead at SNS.

Surely reading

I spoke to a woman who responded to Mr. Isshiki's tweet, “I had fun and bitches on my sister's line, who died last year.” The woman is 56 years old. In May last year, my sister died at the age of 50 after five years of illness. He was a close sister who went out for lunch in a car driven by his sister. Both of them raised their childcare and talked about playing more together, but that was no longer true.

I still say that I send LINE two or three times a month.

"I want to go to lunch again"
"Carp won"

Most of the contents are incidents and recent reports. But sometimes it overflows.

"I can't help meeting you"

It seems that he keeps sending words with the feeling that he is “reading in heaven”.

Comprehension

Isshiki continues to post this.

It seems that Isshiki himself drew a scene in his drama that conveys his thoughts to the dead.

It seems that the director who shot this scene was an “unknown faction”, but Mr. Isshiki said, “This scene was a wonderful result. The person who did it by groping makes it interesting. "

I was talking about the many replies I received.

“I can't do it myself, but I can talk to it through modern tools and feel that everyone is organizing their thoughts.”

Playback button that cannot be pressed

An answering machine for the deceased drawn by Isshiki. Conversely, some women posted their thoughts on the answering machine left behind by the dead.

"14 years ago when my father passed away, it was still a garage, so my father who lived in the UK often left an answering machine on his home phone."

“I was 26 years old and I did n’t feel like death suddenly, and I did n’t listen to it…”

“I sometimes want to listen to the voice of my father who has come back ashes, but I still can't press the play button on the answering machine ... If I listen to the voice, I'm sure my tears won't stop.”

Posted by Dr. Asami Otsuki.

At the age of three, Mr. Okuma left his English father Eric and returned to Japan with his mother. After that, I started living alone from age 23 to 29 to attend a university in Kagoshima. Eric was leaving an answering machine on the phone of such an apartment.

“It was always an incoherent content that started with“ Hello, Emma chan ”, so I didn't listen to it at the time. My daughter would call me worried.”

Mr. Otsuki didn't reply because he was troublesome to call back in English. The answering machine was not erased because it was a message from a father far away.

After 15 years ...

However, when Mr. Otsuki was 26 years old, Eric died in England. He lived far away and couldn't see the last of his father, and he still thinks that his father is still alive.

“Because I was a doctor, I intended to have taken the death of a person properly, but when I became relative, the story was completely different.”

Although I was worried about getting rid of it, the answering machine was still not thrown away.

“Someday, I will listen to my father's message when my heart is ready.”

It has been over 10 years since I thought so. Mr. Otsuki who was pushed back by Mr. Isshiki's tweet. I want to listen to the message carefully according to the father's day of death on the 18th of this month.

“I think each person has a way to say goodbye. In my case, when I hear that I didn't connect to my father after listening to the answering machine, I wonder if it would be a real farewell.”

Lastly, Mr. Okuma was talking about this.

“If you hear the answering machine and say“ Thank you! ”...”