A voice we wished we still had.
The seed of WordsLater was planted with the loss of a grandmother - Ruth Hite, known to her family as Nana - and the ache of wishing for just one more message from her, a voice from heaven that never came. In the long years of grief and depression that followed, the thought kept returning: a single letter, held back and delivered at the right moment, could have changed everything. Most of the important things people want to say are said too late, if at all. There should be a way to write them now and trust they'll arrive when they're needed most, in our own words and our own voice.
A second goodbye.
Twelve years later, we lost a second grandmother - Darlene Walters, known to her family as Grammy - after a long fight with lung cancer. The grief was familiar, and so was the wish: that a few of her words could keep arriving, in her own voice, on the birthdays and quiet evenings still to come. By then it was clear this couldn't stay an idea any longer.
From idea to plan.
The idea finally took shape. We started sketching out what a private, long-term message service would actually need: strong encryption, a delivery reserve that could outlive its founders, trusted-contact verification, and a quiet, unhurried tone in everything it touched.
Public beta.
WordsLater opened to early members. The first scheduled letters went out. The first parent-to-child messages were sealed for delivery decades from now. The vault accepted its first sensitive items.
General availability.
WordsLater is open to everyone. One-time packs, a lifetime Legacy plan, video and voice messages, printed mail, and full posthumous delivery - all built to be private, simple, and dependable for the long haul.