Correspondent of the Day: Hand-Written Notes Show Old-Fashioned Love
Hand-Written Notes Show Old-Fashioned Love
Editor, Times-Dispatch: Recently I strayed into one of those cavernous bookstores resembling an antiseptic neo-Pavlovian condition room with bright lights and white walls. What jumped out was a single row. I estimated it to be 54 feet long packed with hundreds of species of cards -- the invention of psychological engineers and polished up by artists and wanna-be poets churning out private, random, gratuities of filial devotion. There were also countless cards for funerals, birthdays, graduation, get-well, weddings, and the consequences of weddings.
Near Father's Day, I stood back and observed a crowd of folks frantically pawing through for just the right card printed in imitation handwriting so that if Dad were in his second childhood, he might be duped into believing the sentiment was not hand-me-down, but custom-made -- a lyrical outpouring of the sender's over-flowing heart.
It seems a hand-written note from the heart is old-fashioned. After all, it brings money only to the Post Office.
Cecil E. Johnson.
Williamsburg.
Advertisement
Reader Reactions
Had you peered closer you would have found the perfect card for yourself in the “crabby Dad (grouches only)“ section. Lighten up on the hallmark card-reliant.
Youth of today don’t have a concept of handwritten notes (except to excuse an absence). Please don’t discourage card giving!
Virtually everything was better in the good ole days than it is today. I am glad I won’t be around to see how much worse life has gotten 40 years from now.
Post a Comment(Requires free registration)
- Please avoid offensive, vulgar, or hateful language.
- Respect others.
- Use the "Flag Comment" link when necessary.
- See the Terms and Conditions for details.


Advertisement