06 December 20XX+1
My Dear Lucilius:
I note by the count that this appears to be my 200th letter to you since this situation more or less started.
I say “200th”. In point of fact I do not know that this is precisely true; this is based on my count – which to be fair, has often been off in the past; as I like to say I am accurate but not always precise.
Still, let us assume that – for better or worse – this is indeed letter 200.
I have to confess to you (you will already know this, of course) that most likely these are more letters than I have written to anyone ever, perhaps even as many as I have written in my life. That strikes me as a rather odd thought.
Even when we were growing up, letters were still something that were “done”, even if not to the frequency of the previous two generations (by our time phone calls were a regular thing, even if there was such a thing as “long distance charges” – how strange that sounds now). And we, in turn, were building on a tradition that went back in some form to the Roman Republic, where we still have the correspondences of Seneca and Cicero.
I remember writing in high school to our friends that were slightly ahead of us in college, the anticipation when sending the letter off and the pleasant surprise when the letter returned. And not just any sort of letter: decorative letters in calligraphy or the text written in a spiral or wave or even with elements of foreign languages.
That age, at least for us, passed too quickly. Letters became small notes in cards and then just cards on holidays – and then almost nothing at all, as e-mail and text messages overwhelmed even calling someone else.
And then, of course, The Collapse. And up to 50 years of electronic records were wiped clean.
Buried in a small chest somewhere I still have the letters I received and in some cases those that I sent to my grandparents and parents and family members. It is odd, looking at them now, the cramped pen style and the thoughts of a boy and teenager writing about far away places that likely none of them would ever see. Beyond that, I have nothing except what I may have downloaded on a computer that I begrudge the use of for the power drain it represents.
Except for these letters now, of course.
They are perhaps not as remarkable or meaningful as the letters written in the past and savoured by generations, but perhaps also they represent yet another small way to push back against the entropy of a civilization that, having placed all on an altar that was more out of control than it believed, suddenly consumed it all.
Cicero and my namesake, I suspect, would probably be pleased.
Your Obedient Servant, Seneca
This post brings back memories TB, long distance calling rates were cheaper on Sunday nights from/to Chicago, ask me how I know. Now letters......man......it's been too long since those were written out and mailed. Getting one?! Opening that envelope carefully and reading it, still bring a smile to the face. Excellent offering this day sir.
ReplyDeleteNylon12 - Or chugging quarters and dimes into a payphone to hear "You now have another...10 minutes" in that robotic female voice.
DeleteLike you, writing this made me realize that I have not sent a letter in years. What is a little odder is that I likely do not have more than a handful of addresses I could send them to. And likely, hidden away somewhere, I have almost every letter I have ever received (as opposed to the thousands of emails and texts that just disappear).
This recalls conversations that I've had in the past with librarians and archivists - they were terrified of the consequences of committing everything to electronic media, with no other records. They had seen successive generations of media each incompatible with what came before, and priceless information lost as a consequence. At least Seneca will have that record available, and to those who follow him.
ReplyDeleteWill - Precisely. I have things saved on disk and zip drives that I could not recover today without significant effort. At one point The Ravishing Mrs. TB had thousands of photos saved on a external drive, which partially failed. We were able to save most of the pictures (at some cost), but not everything.
DeleteThanks to our reliance on the electronic realm, we are one point of failure away from civilizational style information being erased.
I guess letter writing was mostly dead even when I was younger as I can only remember a few letter exchanges between myself and others and those were usually single letters that were tossed. But in the course of my genealogy research, some of my most treasured finds are letter exchanges between by great great grandmother and great uncle and a handful of other single letters. They inspired me to write a letter once a week to my eldest daughter last year while I was in college and I was happy to note she kept every single one. Here in a couple weeks, I will start that project again.
ReplyDeleteEd - It had largely died when I started as well, and most of my exchanges were with friends older in college or friends in college. But like you, our genealogical records include letters which are a unique source of information.
DeleteWhat a great idea for a project! I am glad she saw the value in them.
When we moved in 2000 I got an email at Hotmail. And like most of them because I had been using the same password for years. Now once or twice a year they would say I need to choose a new password. I'm sure I wrote it on a paper at that time but I was moving, downsizing and multiple people in home packing. Somehow that password was lost. Used that computer which was 23 years old computer so bought new one. Oops, big mistake. Without that password they would not let me in my account. Asked me when I had sent my last emailed and to who I sent it to. I'm just not a stay in touch that way. Couldn't answer so I still can't get in. Cut off from all the hubby sent me, family history, and so much more.
ReplyDeleteAnon - Wow. Oddly enough, I am randomly in the same boat as I have an older (11 year computer) and still have a very old e-mail address. So the chances are there as well.
DeleteI have perhaps two people I hear from through e-mail. Other than that, it is all texts or social media.