Some people will say you are not right -really know someone until you live with them, but sometimes you are not right -really know someone until you bury it. Death has a strange way to pull out the frame out of the closet – right when you try to make peace with the loss of loved ones, life throwing a little surprise.
The new internet is on when a redditor asks people who lose someone close whether they find secrets after their death. And the answer is the same part surprising, touching, and directly from the crime document.
More Info: Reddit
- Read more: 35 Surprising Secrets that Craw out of the Cabinet after someone dies and leaves a breathless family
#1
My great aunt is … my great uncle.
I’m cool with that. Kudos to him because he did that in a time when it was really difficult.

Credit Image: Dripdroponmytiptop
#2
Uncle Ray and Aunt Ann who were great lived in a small house on the outskonds of the city. Never have a child or pet. Their house is always a mess; The required roof is repaired or in favor of falling. When Uncle Ray’s truck broke down, he didn’t fix it, he just rode a bicycle around the city. He always wore Levi’s blue jeans and white cotton shirts. He will cut grass to get extra money, and he is a car seller that day.
Ray and Ann died 3 hours separately, in various facilities. First Ann; Then Ray.
Because Ray was the last person to live, they contacted the next relative who was my mother. He got a call from a lawyer and was afraid to call him back because he thought they would make him pay for the funeral. The lawyer says no, no, you just need to go in and talk to me.
Piles and piles of CDs and bonds, laundry baskets are filled with cash (covered with clothes), cash rolled under the kitchen sink, some here, some there, some of the bank accounts … finally approaching $ 2 million.
The only bill that my mother had to pay on the name of Ray after she graduated was the electricity bill … $ 37.

Credit Image: SnowWhite88
#3
I grew up thinking that my family was fine. I always have branded clothes and pleasant vacation prizes and my mother drove me to many school events out of town without worrying about gas.
When he died, I found out that he had left a lot of credit card debt. We actually did not do something financially financially, but he really wanted me to match, so he gave me all the other children, even if he could not afford it. I found one of his last journals that said how bad he wanted me to be accepted. I still don’t, but I appreciate his business. I hope I can thank him for trying.

Credit Image: Anon
#4
My great -grandfather lived with me since I was born, I knew everything about him but after he died, I learned some interesting stories. One of them is how in the 50s, he used to be an alcohol addict who went berserk, and went to party all the time, then one day he woke up and found my great -grandmother who was beaten almost to porridge, he asked who did it, apparently he did it with a drunken compatibility. After that he stopped drinking cold turkey, the only one when he drank after that was my uncle’s marriage in 1986 and his 75th birthday in 2005.

Credit Image: Russeljimmy
#5
My great grandmother met my great -grandfather on Ellis Island when immigrating to the US. He is 16 and he is 17 years old, or that’s what everyone believes. When he died right after the 97th alleged birthday, my family found from the log of immigration he was actually 100, and had lied about his age because it would not be accepted in the community for a) Single at the ages of 19 and B) married a younger man.

Credit Image: Chirpyderp
#6
When my grandfather died, I found out that he had 11 children from a previous marriage. None of his grandchildren knew, but I thought everyone remained silent until the funeral. I glad I have a place to fall in France now.

Credit Image: Hooserdoc
#7
My grandfather. He saved money. All money.
We found more than $ 2000 in his basement. In money.
Fortunately, he was also very careful about rolling them, even in his old age, he did not often roll it out. Maybe there are $ 300 or $ 400 of the money that has not been rolled up, but the rest is fortunately rolled up.

Credit Image: Starcruiser_stasarik
#8
When my grandfather died, he had changed his desire to put myself and my brothers, putting money into college funds to be shared evenly. My grandfather never helped my mother go to college because she didn’t think it was a woman’s place to get higher education. My mother was still in contact with him even though it made him upset and before he died, he said how proud he was for everything he had done. His college funds, he left for my siblings and I put the same portion for my sister.
#9
After my father passed by, I knew he had carried out a fireflow for three months to dig Japan out of the caves in the Philippines.
My father didn’t talk much about war. He never mentioned this section. Knowing from Mother she had a terrible nightmare of her life about it.

Credit Image: Fretman124
#10
Finding my grandfather gay 2 years after he died. His wife (my grandmother) really denied that he had cheated with another man for 50 years they were married. He finally admitted that it was AIDS he died, not a random disease.

Credit Image: WaywayToononysecrets
#11
My grandfather used the mass “loan” money to start his business. Find this when a mob retired appears at his burial reception.
Edit: I know he is at least washed and/or hiding money; Besides that, I don’t know. His brother also has a very successful real estate business. Their parents (my grandfather’s grandfather) have a small agriculture; They don’t come from money.
It was an Italian horde in the Bay Area.

Credit Image: MUCKINABALL
#12
A few years ago, my great uncle died. When he died, besides a big house in Chicago, he left $ 15 million to separate his children. (Each $ 3 million) because it turns out, he is only two steps under the Kingpin of the Chicago big hordes. He took money and left forever after being shot and realized that he did not want his children to grow without a father. Also, his wife already has 2 tours before selling it and marries her.

Credit Image: Pigsfly1133
#13
My father, in the late 50s, helped rob the bank in New York. He drove a Get Away car.
He did 5 full years he was sentenced because every time he was asked about the people who worked with him he did not say anything.

Credit Image: Anon
#14
After my husband’s grandmother died in January, they found a photo from the 1940s a handsome man in uniform among his items: The back reads something along the line “with my deepest love and devotion, Terry”. But that was not her husband (with whom he married during the war) and no one had heard him mention it before. He must mean something to him, to hold on to the photo for more than 70 years.

Credit Image: Emjaybe
#15
A family friend, almost a uncle and next door neighbor. We see this family every day, their children and we cannot be separated. He works as a salesman and often travels. He died unexpectedly one day a heart attack. In his funeral, his other family appeared. He has a wife and other children in other parts of the country all the time. No one knows.

Credit Image: Misscarlota
#16
A few years after my grandfather died, I learned that he worked for the NASA/ICBM program during the Cuban missile crisis.
Apparently he was taken away during a crisis in a car that was not marked right when it first began. He was not allowed to talk about where he went and with whom he was.
Also, when he is being seen for this job, the FBI or CIA is like stalking him for more than half a year to make sure he is not a bad seed. But one day, his neighbor across the street called the police at the FBI or CIA agent because they had been parked outside his home for a month. My father said that the quarrel between the police and the agent was quite funny and awkward.
#17
I am not too close to my grandfather, I was young when he died, but because he was fine … dying, he had to have a respiratory tube. After he died, the doctors gave my grandmother with dentures.
Apparently, when he was 21 years old, as a birthday present, his father took him to the dentist so that all his teeth were pulled and had fake ones. No one knows, including his wife and all his children. Apparently this is a general practice.

Credit Image: Joannagoanna
#18
I found my beloved great -grandfather, Um … “friendly” with his daughter … it changed the way I looked at my whole family.

Credit Image: Tinkerunk
#19
My grandfather graduated a few years ago. My mother and I have worked on our ancestors and we know that my grandfather ran liquor at Far Rockaway Beach with every big name runner in New York during the ban. We always know that my grandfather has problems with drinking past and can never touch things again but he never talked about how or why he developed problems.
#20
I know that my great uncle has never been married, died of a virgin, and gay.

Credit Image: Wrestlechick
#21
That my mother has a brother. My uncle is a family sheep, running away after high school, inside and outside of his life prison, you get the idea.

Credit Image: Swimmerboy29
#22
Not surprisingly but my aunt died when he was 18 years old, he had smoked since he was 11/12 and my grandmother only knew it when he went to gather his things from the hospital. We used to find the most stupid reason to go and smoke, I didn’t know how he never realized.
#23
I work at a TV station. I have a colleague-a producer and reporter-who really likes Oprah and everything is related to Oprah. After he passed, I knew he really worked part time at Harpo on the weekend all the time, but hardly told anyone here because he didn’t want anyone to think he didn’t really care about us.
- You might also like: 21 photos of famous people before they became world -famous celebrities

Credit Image: Guspolly
Game Center
Game News
Review Film
Berita Olahraga
Lowongan Kerja
Berita Terkini
Berita Terbaru
Berita Teknologi
Seputar Teknologi
Berita Politik
Resep Masakan
Pendidikan
Berita Terkini
Berita Terkini
Berita Terkini
review anime
Gaming Center
Originally posted 2025-08-21 19:00:05.