The Post
In the news today are reports that Royal Mail, to help defray the losses it is making, wants to abolish postal deliveries on Saturdays. According to the BBC, the company is arguing that a delivery service created for 20 billion letters is not sustainable when it is only being required to deliver 7 billion.
I confess I still enjoy those rare occasions when I receive a handwritten letter and look back with nostalgia on the days of 2 deliveries a day, including one before I set off for work. Now, of course, we have e-mails and messaging services rendering the posting of correspondence almost obsolete.
That said, I confess the sight of the post van in the street always arouses a surge of inner excitement. Unfortunately it is invariably tempered by disappointment when we receive either nothing at all or a pile of junk mail that’s moved straight from floor to recycling bin.
In the past week we had two such deliveries and I did actually sift through the first wondering if, a little like online advertising, we are being tracked by cookies and internet activity to establish likely ages and interests in an effort to ensure targeted marketing. There were 2 invitations: one to visit a care home; the second to try out independent retirement living. Perhaps I should be grateful there wasn’t one from the Co-Op offering its funeral services.
Thankfully the postman redeemed himself on the next occasion, or so I thought with a flyer showing a grey haired woman about to jump into a swimming pool alongside the slogan, “I’m not slowing down.” A second leaflet suggested I might be interested in a trek for charity; Kilimanjaro here I’d come if I didn’t have an unstable right knee, I thought. Then I looked at the documents in closer detail, the first was clearly from a financial institution wanting the retired brigade’s savings and the second even promised me the opportunity to connect with others facing the challenges of dementia.
You know what? If this is the material that now flows through my letterbox, I’m all for reducing the number of deliveries and sticking to email servers with automatic spam filters and unsubscribe buttons in future.
Comments
ps I too love getting a snail mail. I think its why I continue to subscribe to a magazine as I love it when it drops through the door!
It always amazed me that up until I hit 50 I was forever receiving catalogues for sexy underwear and push-up bras.“
A great line