War is often measured in numbers — casualties, losses, dates, statistics. November’s letter turns away from the battlefield and into the quiet rooms where the uncounted wounds live. It reflects on the emotional collisions, fractures inside families, and silent grief passed down through generations — harms that never make it into history books but shape the lives of those who survive.
This month honors women and families who bear the weight of conflict in their bodies and homes, those who break quietly while the world only counts the noise. The letter examines suffering carried in kitchens, bedrooms, and living rooms, reminding us that healing from war requires more than peace treaties; it requires acknowledging the invisible scars that linger long after guns fall silent.
At its core, November is a gentle reckoning and a call for recognition: a space to witness the pain that is too often overlooked and honor those living with the shadows of violence.
A Glimpse Inside the Letter

A single page from November — a month that honored silent wounds and uncounted losses. The complete letter lives with those who received it in real mail.