People Are Sharing The Surprising Secrets That Were Uncovered After Someone Died

Note: Discussions of death, suicide, and abuse.

We all have secrets...but only some of us will take them to the grave.

A hand places a single tulip on a gravestone in a cemetery
D-keine / Getty Images

Recently, we rounded up some replies from this Reddit thread that asked: "What disturbing fact came to light about a family member after they passed away?" From unknown families to hidden cash, there was no shortage of secrets that were probably supposed to remain...secret.

The stories reminded me that all humans carry a multitude of knowns and unknowns that can impact perceptions and relationships of a person, whether good or bad. So, I turned the question back to the BuzzFeed Community, who shared more terrifying, painful, and shocking secrets they uncovered after someone passed.

I was reminded, once again, that there's often A LOT we don't always know about someone...oh, and a lot of the US's dark, twisted history was really not that far away. Here's everything they shared:

1."My grandfather went on the road looking for work during the Great Depression. He was picked up by a couple while hitchhiking in east Texas in the 1930s. After he died in 1955, my dad found a local newspaper article in my grandfather's stuff telling of the incident. We found out the couple was Bonnie and Clyde."

A couple from the early 20th century poses in front of a vintage car; the woman stands on the car's side, holding the man's shoulders
Hulton Archive / Getty Images

2."My father passed away from cancer in 2016. He had always been adamant about how much he hated drugs. He raised us in a drug-free household and didn't even drink. He had a part-time job where he would go to high schools and give presentations about staying away from drugs. After he passed, my sister and I were looking at his belongings in the attic. Hidden in a corner was a suitcase. We opened it up, expecting it to be full of old clothes or paperwork..."

Green suitcase and red briefcase on a wooden floor next to a chair and a leaning mirror

3."When my dad died, my mom was quick to tell us there was no life insurance. In fact, she brought it up. We were not surprised or anything; they were old and comfortable, and we kids are all grown, so really, no dependents would need to be provided for. Everything passed to her. When she passed away, my sister and I met a few times with their lawyer to settle the estate. During one of the first meetings, the lawyer disclosed to us that there WAS a life insurance policy that my dad had that named us kids as beneficiaries. My mom was not forgetful; she did not have dementia. She knew that policy existed but chose to keep it from us."

emilypost

4."My uncle was a professional gambler. When he passed away, the family found a treasure trove of photos and letters from Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin. He never told anyone he played cards with Sinatra and Martin or had dinner with them. Apparently, the three men bonded over golf. No one in the family knew my uncle played golf. He had an entire secret life in Vegas. He dated a showgirl and kept a car out there. We found old Sands Hotel items, including a whole box of their old slot machine tokens. We found autographed records of the Rat Pack. The biggest shock was a photo of my uncle playing cards, and Elvis was standing behind him in the background."

Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra in formal tuxedos sit laughing at a crowded event table with drinks and food

5."I had an uncle Joe who was a dapper gentleman. He was always dressed to the nines. Cigarette held in an ivory holder. I adored him. He was like no one else I had ever seen. When my mom was dying, she told me he was [intersex], and his birth certificate indicated he was named Josephine and declared female, even though he had both types of sex organs. He never had any surgeries and was happily married to my mom's sister for 40+ years."

A person in formal attire, including a top hat and scarf, is holding a cigarette. They stand in front of a large clock
John Springer Collection / Corbis via Getty Images

6."A couple of years after my uncle passed away, his daughter reached out via an ancestry site. We didn't know he had a daughter. Neither did he. He had gone AWOL from the Navy and gotten a woman pregnant. He went back to his assignment and never heard from the woman again. About two years ago, his son, whom my uncle also didn't know about, also reached out via an ancestry site. I'm just waiting for a third kid at this point."

mrose5291

7."My dad was a closeted gay man who participated in BDSM/cross-dressing and sex slave relationships. He had been an investment banker and married to my mom for over 57 years. I found all his accouterments (high heels, nail polish, furry handcuffs, fishnets). We had found out years before that he was talking to men but didn't know the extent of it. There were videos, fetish websites, and a burner phone."

Two people talking closely, one whispering to the other, hand raised to mouth. Faces are not fully visible

8."I found out while I was in my 50s that I had an older sister by my father. He was dead; my aunt, my dad's sister, told me that he had an affair with a married nurse during WWII. The nurse passed away; her husband came home and took the daughter with him, knowing she wasn't his, to California. I'm sure the daughter doesn't know. When I asked questions, no one would answer them. I asked everyone I could think of, but no one helped. I don't have any family but my children and grandchildren, for whom I am so grateful. My daughter bought me an ancestry kit, hoping she was in their database, but she wasn't. I was so disappointed; I would love to know her. I'm 75 years old now."

—Anonymous

9."It's finally my time to shine. Years ago, my husband kissed me good night and said he was leaving to work the night shift. I received a phone call from paramedics around midnight that he had died in a car accident. I was immediately confused as the accident occurred almost two hours from our home and his work. Over the weeks and months after his death, secrets began to come out. His blood alcohol levels came back that night over three times the limit, but almost 15 years later, I still do not know where he went drinking that night or who he was with."

A hand holding a smartphone displaying an incoming call with "Unknown Caller" on the screen

10."My mother-in-law found out she had a half-brother after her dad passed. Pretty normal, right? BUT the story is crazy. When her dad was 16, he was sleeping with a married neighbor who was in her 30s. She got pregnant with his child, and raised it with her husband as their own. Her dad knew it was his but never said anything. He then had my mother-in-law pretty young and lived on the same street. So, my mother-in-law remembers playing with the kid across the street, who 45 years later turned out to be her half-brother. We met him recently, and the resemblance is uncanny. Crazy! That woman would be in jail today."

Led_Tasso93

11."When my grandmother was alive, I knew she had been sent to the Carlisle Industrial School as a child. After she died, I found out that she was sent from Carlisle to the Pawnee School in Genoa, Nebraska, when she was about 10 years old. The Pawnee School put kids into homes as slaves, and many of them were killed and abused. My grandmother survived because she was made a slave at the school as a seamstress. She learned to sew at Carlisle, and those skills probably saved her life. She was not sent out to white homes but kept at the school."

Historic classroom photo showing students and a teacher in a late 19th to early 20th-century setting, with students reading and writing

12."Everybody knew my grandfather was a police officer. I knew, even as a child, he was a police officer. Growing up, I used to meet other retired officers who worked with my grandfather and would joke to us that our grandfather 'was the meanest man I know.' I didn't know him as a mean person; in fact, quite the opposite. He was a wonderful grandfather, a devout Christian! It wasn't until his funeral that it all made sense."

Historic photo of pedestrians and cars on a street with a police officer in the foreground during a civil rights march, 1960s

13."When my father died, his other daughter DM'ed us on Facebook. She said she was the daughter of my dad. She said her mom and my dad met at a bar. Of course, we didn't believe her. She ended up sending us letters that he wrote to her mother acknowledging the pregnancy. She even sent us a picture of my dad when he was holding her. It was very odd. Apparently, she was told we were very rich and had a mansion with a wait staff and all."

A man in a light suit sits on a garden chair in front of a large mansion, with another man standing beside him in a uniform

14."This is a sad one. After a family member died, we went through her phone and diary and learned that her longtime husband was physically abusive to her. It was devastating to learn this, and I wish that we had been able to help her while she was still alive. What I learned is that abuse can hide in plain sight, and abusers aren't stereotypical Hollywood villains. A person can be sweet to animals, say 'I love you' to lots of people, have many friends, do heroic work in their community, etc., and still physically abuse their spouse."

—Anonymous

15."Not only did we find out my mother had SEVERE diagnosed-but-untreated diabetes (which she had apparently secretly refused care for while continuing to guzzle Pepsi daily while LITERALLY ON HER DEATHBED — meaning that, combined with her other ailments, she had essentially committed slow suicide), we also found an ARREST RECORD showing that she'd spent a night in jail for shoplifting several years earlier (despite being a deeply law-abiding Christian her entire life). My dad had no memory of her ever having spent a night away, so how she managed to cover for her overnight absence (let alone how she afforded the $2k fine while on welfare), we still have NO idea."

Person with handcuffs on wrists, wearing a knit sweater

—Anonymous

Zoka74 / Getty Images/iStockphoto

16."While going through our 86-year-old grandmother's house after she passed, we found her passport. Everyone celebrated her birthday on October 25 forever. I even got married on October 25 to honor her. Her passport said her date of birth was October 28. We have no idea where the 25th came from!"

shypotato613

17."I have a rare genetic disorder, so I have volunteered for tons of DNA tests. I’ve also meticulously traced my family tree back many generations on all sides in honor of my grandma, who was obsessed with genealogy, only to find that I’m 20% an ethnicity that shows up NOWHERE in my 'official' family tree. I know DNA doesn’t adhere to geopolitical borders, but this 20% is from a place WAY off and so isolated that it’s actually studied for its DNA. Grandma……….👀"

OxfordCommasPlz

18."When I was about 8 years old, my grandfather in Poland was suffering from throat cancer. My parents emigrated to Maine from Poland in the early '80s. We got word that he wasn't doing well and had little time, so my mom and I hopped on a plane to fly to Poland to say our goodbyes. When we landed, as we were walking through the airport, we saw my aunt waiting for us with a solemn look on her face. My grandfather had passed away mid-flight. I still remember my mom breaking down and crying right there at that moment."

Two women embracing warmly in an airport setting, conveying a sense of emotional reunion

19."My grandfather worked in television in the late '50s/early '60s, right when the broadcasting industry was really taking off in North Carolina. Key info: He worked with both Black and white men on his broadcasting crews at a time when NC was HEAVILY segregated and discriminatory. Everyone in the family thought he got fired from his first TV job because he made a careless mistake with footage and an expensive camera. After finding his old journals when cleaning out my grandparents' house after he died, I found out the actual reason he got fired."

A vintage TV studio scene with a news anchor seated at a desk, a cameraman filming, and another person standing near a podium

20."My best friend committed suicide. I later found a journal among his things where he listed everyone he had slept with. My ex-wife's name was among them. From what I knew, the list was chronological, meaning it had occurred while we were married. I had no idea whatsoever until reading it at that moment."

—Anonymous

21."I learned that my best friend and soulmate of 30 years left a $40,000 lien on our house and over $30,000 of credit card debt. I was so devasted by her loss that the money seemed inconsequential. We always joked about leaving this world with more than we came in with... My life has never been the same."

An elderly man sits on a bed, holding a sheet of paper, surrounded by scattered papers in a dimly lit room

—Anonymous

Thepalmer / Getty Images

22."My husband took care of the finances, and we were well invested (so I thought). When he died, I called the brokers to transfer the accounts to my name. There was nothing. He gambled everything away, and I was left flat broke with maxed-out credit card debt to cards I never knew about. Ladies, watch your bank accounts and finances like a hawk; do not rely on your loved one to take care of you."

—Anonymous

23."My kind, adoring grandfather abandoned his family during the war, leaving his young wife and four children in poverty. Practically, I can't imagine how hard life was for his wife, who was still nursing their baby when he left. We don't know if they thought he had died or if they knew the truth. We know they lived hard, brutal lives without a 'breadwinner' in the home at that time."

A woman sits on a bed feeding a young child, while another child stands beside them. An infant sleeps in a suitcase crib nearby

24."My great uncle, a lifelong bachelor, passed in the late '90s. In his will, it was discovered he had a child with a woman of a different faith as a young man, presumably in the 1930s-40s. His family would only 'allow' their relationship if she had a boy, but she had a girl, so they ended it. My grandma knew about it, but everyone else was shocked. As I understand it, we found out his daughter lived near us, and my mom went to meet her, but I guess she said she wasn’t interested in knowing more after what happened. I can’t blame her, although it saddens me knowing I have family we'll never meet because of a bigoted decision 90 years ago."

—Anonymous

And lastly:

25."When my grandmother passed away in the 1990s, we found a box of letters hidden behind a drawer in the kitchen. Its contents have been a family story for years since. She and our grandfather were very strict and religious, enforcing crazy doctrines and rules in their home whenever we visited. After he died, she leaned further into these demands, requiring all the granddaughters to wear dresses in her home. While cleaning out her house after she passed, we found letters going back several decades from women who described passionate and secret love affairs while our grandfather was at work and my dad and his siblings were at school. The most recent letter was dated about a year before her passing. We were all shocked."

A handwritten note reads: "Ann, Sweet woman—sometimes I truly believe you are my anomaly. Strangely conquered, Mary." Dated July 1985

—Anonymous

u/gayearthchan / Via reddit.com

Did you discover a secret—whether tragic, sad, funny, or surprising—after someone passed away? Let me know in the comments or by submitting to this anonymous form.

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. Other international suicide helplines can be found at befrienders.org. The Trevor Project, which provides help and suicide-prevention resources for LGBTQ youth, is 1-866-488-7386.

If you or someone you know is in immediate danger as a result of domestic violence, call 911. For anonymous, confidential help, you can call the 24/7 National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 (SAFE) or chat with an advocate via the website.