The outrage started with a whisper. One person noticed the letters. Then another.
Soon, a quiet Iowa cemetery became the center of a national storm. A grieving family says it’s a private joke.
Officials say it’s a disgrace carved in stone. As the sun fades over Warren-Powers Cemetery, the first letters silently sn… Continues…
The stone stands there, gray and ordinary, until you read it the way his family does.
Each line on the back—“Forever in our hearts. Until we meet again…”—secretly spells out the phrase Steven Owens jokingly
used on those he loved most. To his children, it isn’t profanity. It’s the sound of their dad laughing in the kitchen, mock-annoyed, softening into a smile.
But grief doesn’t exist in a vacuum, and their private farewell sits in a public field of loss.
Township trustees worry about the next family who bends to place flowers and suddenly sees the message they can’t unsee.
Where does one person’s right to mourn end and another’s right to peace begin? Years later, the stone is still there, t
he acrostic still hidden in plain sight—forcing everyone who notices it to decide what, exactly, respect looks like when love refuses to be polite.