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Sean Sharp's avatar

I write letters. I have for years and both regularly to the same people and spontaneously to others and less regularly. For $0.68, to me, a miracle happens: You drop an envelope with a written letter in a box and a few days later it shows up to the recipient. Time travel happens at that point as what they are reading is, most often, a few days old. Then if there's a reply and a conversation starts this way, it's all the better.

Writing a letter forces me to sit down and be present with that person: with my words, reflections and thoughts and how I want to share those with the individual I am writing to. It's not instant, which is why it is so good. Reading a letter is similar: I need to find time and space and a place to sit down and open the envelope and read it.

Simply wonderful.

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A.V. Crofts's avatar

One specific example is my recent move to use my phone spontaneously to call friends and family. While I fully embrace the scheduled call when there are degrees of difficulty like significant time zone chasms, etc., that instinct to set everything up ahead of time had permeated my phone habits broadly (a byproduct of our digital lives to be sure). I decided this works against the very joy of a phone call with one of my loves: connecting across time and space. The act of placing a call randomly shouldn't be a radical act, but it felt that way at first. Sometimes I reach a person at a good time, many times it's a voicemail. But it never feels like wasted effort: I get a happy jolt of connectivity regardless. This might be in part due to the fact I embrace my reputation for the epic voicemail message!

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