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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    You never write any more; well, hardly anyone does

    WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” Mom might get a quick note in the mail. Sister might get a birthday card. But that's about it. For the typical American household these days, nearly two months will pass before a personal letter shows up.

    The avalanche of advertising still arrives, of course, along with magazines and catalogs. But personal letters โ€” as well as the majority of bill payments โ€” have largely been replaced by email, Twitter, Facebook and the like.

    "In the future old 'love letters' may not be found in boxes in the attic but rather circulating through the Internet, if people care to look for them," said Webster Newbold, a professor of English at Ball State University in Muncie, Ind.

    Last year the typical home received a personal letter about every seven weeks, according to the annual survey done by the post office. As recently as 1987 it was once every two weeks. That doesn't include greeting cards or invitations.

    It's very different from the nation's earlier days. When Benjamin Franklin was in charge of the mail, letters bound far-flung Americans together.

    "If I write, it's only to my mother and it's a quick note," said Andy Aldrich, an education program coordinator who lives in Vienna, Va. He said he sends his mother a hand-written letter about once every four months. Otherwise, Aldrich said he mostly communicates through emails, text messages and Skype with relatives.

    Bob Cvetic, of Waldorf, Md., a health specialist with a federal law enforcement agency, said different forms of communication have different purposes.

    "Emails are something quick," he said. "Letters are letters. When I'm writing a letter to a friend, it's a personal note. You can't send an email saying 'hey, sorry to hear you lost your father.'"

    Mike Stanley of Silver Spring, Md., said he mostly uses the Postal Service to pay bills. He did send his sister a birthday card in August. "I don't send letters. I use the cellphone or email," he said. "It's faster."

    Even Stanley's mailing of bill payments is no longer the norm, with the post office reporting that, "for the first time, in 2010, fewer than 50 percent of all bills were paid by mail."

    The Postal Service says the decline in letter-writing is "primarily driven by the adoption of the Internet as a preferred method of communication."

    The loss of that lucrative first-class mail is just one part of the agency's financial troubles, along with payment of bills via Internet and a decline in other mail. The Postal Service is facing losses of $8 billion or more this year.

    The loss to what people in the future know about us today may be incalculable.

    In earlier times the "art" of letter writing was formally taught, explained Newbold.

    "Letters were the prime medium of communication among individuals and even important in communities as letters were shared, read aloud and published," he said. "Letters did the cultural work that academic journals, book reviews, magazines, legal documents, business memos, diplomatic cables, etc. do now. They were also obviously important in more intimate senses, among family, close friends, lovers, and suitors in initiating and preserving personal relationships and holding things together when distance was a real and unsurmountable obstacle."

    "It's too early to tell with any certainty whether people are using email, texting, Twitter tweets, Facebook status updates, and so on in the same ways that we earlier relied on the letter for; they are probably using each of these media in different ways, some of which allow people to get closer to each other and engage in friendly or intimate exchange. It seems that email is the most letter-like medium," added Newbold.

    But Aaron Sachs, a professor of American Studies and History at Cornell University, said, "One of the ironies for me is that everyone talks about electronic media bringing people closer together, and I think this is a way we wind up more separate. We don't have the intimacy that we have when we go to the attic and read grandma's letters."

    "Part of the reason I like being a historian is the sensory experience we have when dealing with old documents" and letters, he said. "Sometimes, when people ask me what I do, I say I read other people's mail."

    "Handwriting is an aspect of people's identity," he added. "Back in the day, when you wrote a letter it was to that one person, so people said very intimate things." Today with things like Facebook being more public people may not say as much, he said. And while some people are open in what they email, "it's a very different kind of sharing."

    Said history professor Jeffrey Nathan Wasserstrom of the University of California, Irvine: "There are indeed many ways that a decline in letter-writing will affect future historians, as many people in my profession have certainly benefited from the insights that written missives provide into how people of the past thought and felt,"

    "Personally, I don't get or send many letters, at least not carefully composed ones," he added.

    Wasserstrom still turns to them as a source for his research. "I expect to make a lot of use of letters written by people held hostage in Beijing in the summer of 1900 in my upcoming book on the Boxer Crisis."

    Historian Kerby Miller of the University of Missouri-Columbia said friends "who have done research on immigrants of the last 10 to 20 years say that the letters were used as late as the 1950s and '60s, being replaced by long-distance phone calls and emails."

    Any subject that relies on correspondence โ€” culture, manners, husbands and wives, lovers, friends, brothers, historical business, political history โ€” could suffer a loss with the decline in letter-writing, Miller said.

    Yet there could be some benefit, he said.

    "Many of us used to always feel guilty because we never wrote enough โ€” remember all those letters from Mom and Dad? Well, if Mom and Dad have a computer it's much easier to dash off a note every day or so," he said. "So maybe all the consequences aren't going to be completely negative. Maybe a vast load of guilt will be lifted from the shoulders of the American people."

    James Grossman, executive director of the American Historical Association, said future historians will be turning to email, as journalists already are doing.

    "Email is different from letters, but it is comparable. It is more easily searchable," he said. "But we will have to learn how to use it."

    So the loss of the personal letter may be a threat, but at least some of its functions will live digitally.

    Still, it's hard to imagine poet Robert Browning imploring Elizabeth Barrett to be his BFF.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Stacy Anderson contributed to this report.

    ___

    Online:

    U.S. Postal Service: http://www.usps.com/

     

    300 comments

    • RG Alabama  •  7 mths ago
      We still pay bills by postal mail, though, if the bill is overlooked and will be due in 3 days, we pay online.
      We still send greeting cards through the postal mail. We feel that we are helping the USPS, at least, by buying stamps.
      • Zoey 7 mths ago
        I pay ALL of my bills Online! =o Only thing that doesn't get payed online, is rent. And, I am sure if I could do the rent online, my dad, I would! It would be MUCH easier!
      • William 7 mths ago
        I pay all of my bills online and, Tosha, there is no reason you cannot do your rent that way too. Just about all banks offer bill pay service. Mine allows me to have them send a check to anyone, anywhere, even for those people who cannot receive electronic transfers. You also can choose the date the check is sent, set up automatic payments, etc.
      • Independent One 7 mths ago
        It's purely economics. Most folks are cheap. A stamp would cost them 44-cents; internet usage is basically FREE! (Why buy the cow, when the milk is free?) It doesn't matter why the postal service was established, or that the mails are included in the US Constitution, or that the USPS matters most to the poor, or rural Americans as a center of communication in their communities. Nor, does it matter to sacrifice the livelihood of more than a half-million middle-class workers and add them to the unemployment lines. Hey! Why not widen the gap between the haves & have-nots...Care less about others; think more about yourself. Yet, I wonder ...when some private entrepreneur or Govt. agency manages to charge or tax you for every single email/text/Twitt or what internet-ever...Will you stop using the internet, too? I might.
    • Brian C  •  7 mths ago
      Do letters from Prison inmates count?
    • Edwin  •  7 mths ago
      I mostly use e-mail. I get a more immediate answer. I pay bills online via debit, and I mostly do applications and orders online also.
    • rebeltdk  •  7 mths ago
      People have lost the ability to write intelligently because of email and texting. I am a teacher and most students cannot write complete sentences or express cognitive thinking in the written form. Read posts that are written on Yahoo which prove my point.
      • A Yahoo! User 7 mths ago
        Your post is accurate, and many people that post don't even bother with spellcheck anymore. I won't even get into the grammar issues :/
    • Under my power  •  7 mths ago
      I can't spray my cheap cologne on an e-mail.
      • Zoey 7 mths ago
        Yeah you can. If you want to get questioned about what is on/in the envelope/box. Lol!
      • Coop 7 mths ago
        "UMP"!
        I need a set of glasses like that.
        Cool
      • Shoeless Joe Plumber 7 mths ago
        wow, i want that as a screensaver. Where can I get that.......zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
    • Marsha  •  7 mths ago
      Holy Cow! Does anyone still know how to spell? How to place a stamp on an envelope? Writing was once an art form where we shared intellectual thoughts and ideas, where we wrote prose and poetry. Who cares how slow it is, how much it cost or how novel the idea is to send and recieve a personal letter that is more than a few sentences at a time. Bravo sealing wax and fountain pen TM, you are a brave soldier in a war against unprotected mail, dah, like email is any better? Wonder collectively how many of you recieve unwanted mail sent to your email sites daily? How many man hours daily does it take us to clean out our email sites...longer than a letter?? How many of you have sent an email that has never been delivered and is still out there floating on Universal black matter, lost forever? How many of you are aware of a lack of privacy in our online correspondences and how difficult it is to steam open a letter to do the same thing. You guys are a riot waiting to happen. Keep a little old world charm in your life, send a valentine card, a birthday card or just a note to say you are thinking of a friend, it is worth the fee and the wait.
    • namvet  •  7 mths ago
      Really? I can't recall the last time I got a personal letter in snail mail. I can't get my adult children to even reply to my emails anymore. They're too busy on Facebook, I guess - and I won't join Facebook.
    • Darwin  •  7 mths ago
      I still send letters on occasion. I think it is more personal that way and a nice little surprise for a significant other.
    • dmg1969  •  7 mths ago
      The USPS is an obsolete agency and needs to be greatly down-sized. It was useful in its day, but technology has mostly passed it by. The only thing I get by mail are billing statements (I refuse to pay online), magazines and cards. The last time I wrote a "letter"? 20+ years ago.
      • turqie 7 mths ago
        I agree just like unions.
      • KrissKringle 7 mths ago
        While personal mail volume is down, parcel volume is up. So the computer has also given a boon to the postal service.
      • Barreast 7 mths ago
        How sad for you and i'm sure you haven't received a "letter" in 20+ years either.
    • Carnegie Hill  •  7 mths ago
      I enjoy writing letters - more often something on the inside of a card. I think people still appreciate getting something personal in the usual stack of bills and advertisments... I know I do.
      • TeleMag 7 mths ago
        You work for Halmark don't you?
    • Angelo Bepp  •  7 mths ago
      I get a personal letter once a year..............a parole rejection letter.
    • JTU Ironside  •  7 mths ago
      Really? I am surprised it's only 7 weeks not longer.
    • Carnegie Hill  •  7 mths ago
      I keep many letters and hand-written cards, you come across them years later and they bring a smile, reminisce. How many e-mails can you say about.
    • Carnegie Hill  •  7 mths ago
      E-mail is easy, and there's the problem. Expediency is no way to show appreciation. A good letter takes time, and time devoted to others is always appreciated.
    • Hodgi  •  7 mths ago
      I know the solution...let's have the USPS spend some more f...... money on sponsorships of sporting teams and advertising. After all, I'm sure no one knows they exist, therefore they have to advertise.
    • Jeebsie  •  7 mths ago
      really?? What a brilliant conclusion. Somebody in govt must have spent Millions asking why??? Three reasons. 1. The post office is SLOW! It takes 3-5 days for a mailed letter to get to the destination. Email takes 3-5 SECONDS! 2. It's never kept up with the times. it let fedex and ups steal 90% of the packaging business BECAUSE it is a govt entity run by bureaucratic dogs that do not care . 3. Its a bloated bureaucracy riddled with govt inefficiency and years of business neglect. STUPID!
    • sg  •  7 mths ago
      Sent three personal letters with cash to kids graduating from middle and high school last June and TWO NEVER MADE IT. Never did find out what happened to the cards and nothing was done when I complained. So, yeah. I try not to ever mail anything important. And yes, I know you're not supposed to mail cash, but this has been a tradition in my family for more than 60 years. Not anymore.
    • mo mo mokie  •  7 mths ago
      I still write letters, but it is a dying art. The post office spends a fortune in gas and wages to deliver bulk mailers - that end up in the trash immediately. The USPS is all but dead..
    • DianaB  •  7 mths ago
      And the post office tracked the receipt of personal letters every 7 weeks using what system? Give me a break. I don't believe my mail carrier was keeping track and making notes while he/she sorted and delivered. People with some modicum of etiquette still use regular mail for thank you notes, letters, cards, etc. No, e-mailing is not the same thing, no matter how you cut it. Bills online? Sure, no problem with that. Less paper clutter unless it is something I actually need a copy to have on hand (IRS don't you know) and I would rather have paper that I don't have to download and print myself. E-bills don't seem to make my bills go down because the vendor doesn't have to print and mail a bill, plus the huge bulk rate they get for mailing their stuff, be it advertisement for something I already have or a bill. Postal service just needs to make their post offices more consumer available during their times of need, not being closed before and after people get off work (those that work during the day) and closing for lunch.
    • TM  •  7 mths ago
      I still use a fountain pen and sealing wax.
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