Just a few recent deliveries |
When
we moved to this little house 15 years ago, it wasn't a month until the catalogs
and junk mail began to arrive. Mike found a website called “Catalog
Choice," and I was assigned to follow through. By selecting the catalog on the website, I opted out of receiving it. The process was easy and fun for a while.
But
– as time went on, it seemed like the more catalogs I reported, the more we
received. Many weren’t listed, and then I could report them by listing the
name and address. For others, I might receive a message that this company would
not respond to Catalog Choice and I should contact them myself. Instead of
opting out with a simple click of my mouse, the process became time consuming
and less satisfying. And then, like any non-profit, “Catalog Choice” began to
ask for money so that they could continue their work. While the website
became more complicated, the work seemed less effective. I quietly gave up and
just put the catalogs into recycling.
Of
course, I like catalogs from my favorite companies, especially autumn,
Halloween, and Christmas issues, but for the most part, I don’t shop by
catalog any more. I shop online. I should really eliminate more catalogs because
I swear some companies send them every other week.
And
then there’s the junk mail. I mostly eliminate what we receive on a daily basis
by shredding and tossing. There’s a psychology to mailings from non-profits,
and I resent it. They write monthly to tell you that you haven’t renewed (they
call your annual donation a renewal) when you have, and you just know they’re
taking advantage of the fact that you don’t remember and will probably send
money again. Those folks meet their match in Mike’s meticulous
record keeping. It's further confusing that some organizations have names that are suspiciously alike. To thwart your effort to shred the envelope before opening, they
include things that can’t be easily torn, like stickers and
decals. I’m looking at one right now that says, “Save the Honey Bees!”
Many
companies send mailing labels as a “free gift.” Mike says he only wants
the ones that print his name as “Mike Warnock.” All others are tossed. I also
toss those that aren’t what we’re about, such as horses, military symbols, etc.
And I’m surprised that some organizations will actually apply Mike’s name to lovely
floral labels. That’s just – well, inappropriate – and it seems like a
no-brainer to me. And besides, in reality we send so little mail. I suspect we have enough mailing labels on hand for the duration.
There
are other types of free gifts, such as greeting cards and wrapping paper. What
does this free gift cost, anyway? I just wish they wouldn’t because honestly, I don’t want them.
Lastly,
our children have never lived at this address, but one of them receives junk
mail here regularly. I have interrogated him under bright light, but he claims not to know how this happened. I have taken to contacting these organizations and respectfully requesting removal of his name from their mailing list, pointing out that it’s a waste of their
resources. My efforts will probably be rewarded with more junk mail. KW
4 comments:
I agree with you. It is maddening. I occasionally receive mail addressed to Cheryl Walrath, and she was married while we still lived in Fort Collins, CO. I also get mail addressed to David Walrath, and he moved from Fort Collins to Mesa AZ before we left Fort Collins. Where did they get those addesses and not know about their current name? Even e-mail is not without its problems. Maybe this is a life test to see if we can get throughout life without losing our sanity.
We don't many unwanted catalogs, mostly just from places we do order from. And I use the catalogs to find things I like and then go online to order. I'm still old school.
I've done a "Stop junk mail" thing online that discontinues the yellow book and other things, which I think worked pretty well for awhile. I am easily upset by junk mail AND spam phone calls. I don't even answer my phone anymore unless it's a known number--you'll have to leave a message and I'll call you back (maybe).
Seems to be the way with the reporting. It will work for a while, then it begins to creep in again. Coming from mid-century, it's really hard for me not to answer the phone. I wanted to answer it because Chris might be calling me. But I think you're right, Hallie -- don't answer if you don't know who's calling. You can always return the call if they leave a message.
I also look at catalogs but perhaps not as much as I used to. It's good to look because it's easy to miss things online.
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