In the olden days (talk about dating yourself!) the post was very unreliable. If there was any suggestion that money might be in a letter or something valuable in a parcel, they would just disappear. We estimated that about half of our post never arrived, not because we received so much money in letters, but because people probably thought that we did.
I knew of one young man, in the days before email, who was in a long distance relationship. The two would routinely write their letters in triplicate just so that at least one would get through. They always received at least one of the letters, sometimes two, but rarely all three.
But that was then. Today the postal system has become much more reliable. We don’t often have many parcels disappear, some, but not all that many. More commonly we have received packages or envelopes which have been torn open when someone wanted to see what was inside worth stealing.
Take for example the parcel we just received. When the postal worker ripped it open to look inside he/she found some nicely wrapped presents. There is no way of knowing if any of the contents were stolen, but one of the presents was then torn open.
Usually when this happens today they stick the damaged post into a plastic bag with an apology: sorry, envelop was damaged in transit. This time they just put some tape over the opening to try and hold things together a bit.
I knew of one young man, in the days before email, who was in a long distance relationship. The two would routinely write their letters in triplicate just so that at least one would get through. They always received at least one of the letters, sometimes two, but rarely all three.
But that was then. Today the postal system has become much more reliable. We don’t often have many parcels disappear, some, but not all that many. More commonly we have received packages or envelopes which have been torn open when someone wanted to see what was inside worth stealing.
Take for example the parcel we just received. When the postal worker ripped it open to look inside he/she found some nicely wrapped presents. There is no way of knowing if any of the contents were stolen, but one of the presents was then torn open.
Usually when this happens today they stick the damaged post into a plastic bag with an apology: sorry, envelop was damaged in transit. This time they just put some tape over the opening to try and hold things together a bit.
Pilfering fingers couldn’t resist
Opened parcel with torn open contents
Opened parcel with torn open contents
We sometimes receive an envelope onto which the sender wrote the message “No money enclosed.” I don’t know if that helps, but I’m sure it didn’t help that someone had written on this particular parcel “Your Christmas stockings.” Clearly that was too much temptation for someone.
The problem with this sort of thing is that you just don’t have any recourse. There is nobody worth complaining to who will actually try to do something about it, to stop it happening in future! And that makes these experiences doubly frustrating.
The problem with this sort of thing is that you just don’t have any recourse. There is nobody worth complaining to who will actually try to do something about it, to stop it happening in future! And that makes these experiences doubly frustrating.
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