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What to Write in a Miss You Card for Brother
A miss you card to brother needs a different voice than one to a coworker or a stranger. Here are 18 message ideas — across heartfelt, funny, short, religious, and more — written specifically for this relationship.
A miss-you card is the simplest kind to write and one of the most underrated to receive. It's a low-stakes way of telling someone they cross your mind — a friend you don't see enough, a parent across the country, a sibling whose life took them somewhere else. Keep it short, mention something specific you miss, and resist the urge to apologize for the gap.
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18 Miss You Messages for Brother
Just a quick note to say you've been on my mind a lot lately. No occasion — I just miss you.
Some people drift in and out of your week without effort. You're not one of them — you have to be sought out, and you're worth seeking. Miss you.
It's been too long. Whose fault that is doesn't matter. I miss you and I'd love to see you soon.
Thinking of you today and realizing how much I miss the kind of long, slow conversations we used to have. Let's fix that.
You popped into my head this morning, and instead of just texting, I figured you deserved a card. Miss you.
Distance is the one thing I never quite get used to about us being grown. Miss you. Hope you're okay.
Sending love across the miles. The next time we're in the same room, I'm not letting you leave easily.
Some friendships earn the right to long silences. Ours does. But I still miss you.
Just wanted you to know you're not forgotten over here. Miss you. Let's plan something.
Miss you.
Thinking of you today.
Sending love your way.
It's been too long.
Hope you're well.
Let's fix the distance soon.
You're on my mind.
Miss you. The group chat is not the same without your unhinged opinions.
Just writing to say the bar for our friendship is pretty low and you are still clearing it. Miss you.
How to personalize a miss you card for brother
Mention something specific you miss — a habit, a place you used to go, a conversation you wish you could have face-to-face. Don't apologize for the gap; it makes the recipient feel responsible for it. End with a small, low-pressure plan or a date you'll follow up.
When you're writing to brother in particular, lean on shared history — a memory you can name, a habit you've watched them keep, a moment you'd both remember. The relationship deserves a sentence the rest of the world couldn't write.
What to avoid
Don't lay on guilt about how long it's been or how rarely they call. Don't apologize so heavily that the recipient feels they have to make it up to you. Don't use "miss you" as a setup for a complaint or a request.