I used to send out a holiday newsletter at
this time of year. I called it the “Davis Advent Newsletter.” I wrote it
carefully and concisely so that it fit onto one side of a single page. I
printed them on decorative holiday stationary, and stuffed them into envelopes,
along with our Christmas cards. We tirelessly licked dozens of stamps and went
to the post office to send them on their way. No longer.
We also no longer receive newsletters tucked into Christmas
cards with other people’s family photos. The newsletters always caught us up on
the major happenings of our friends’ lives. They also bragged about travels, kids
and professional achievements. The closest things we now receive to the holiday
newsletter are handwritten notes inside of some Christmas cards.
Even Christmas cards are fewer. I remember when we could
wallpaper a room with the cards we received. Nowadays they comprise a modest
pile on an end table in the living room. We get e-cards and e-newsletters
instead, if that. This year we even got an e-invitation to a family wedding for
the first time. We sent back an e-RSVP. I expected to attend the wedding via
Skype.
That is the price of the internet. Snail mail (as it is now
called) is too slow and too expensive for people. Now everyone knows everything
we do as soon as we do it. Email, texting, Facebook, Twitter, and other social
media have replaced the paper newsletter. There is no longer a need to provide
a chronological recap of the past year.
As Joni Mitchell sang, “something’s lost but something’s
gained.” The gain (I guess it is a gain) is that we now know more than we ever
wanted to know about more people than we ever knew we knew. The loss is that
the overall story of our lives gets lost in the daily details. The proverbial
forest is lost in the trees.
Our lives are a story. Each year comprises a chapter. A
holiday newsletter was a way to conclude the present chapter. Now every year is
open-ended. No overarching story, just a string of events on a Facebook
timeline.
We are always writing the story of our lives and our
family’s life in our heads and hearts. At least I am. I am repeatedly editing
my story in my head, trying to fit current events into my life’s plotline. It
is the way we give our lives meaning. It is how we know how far we have come
and where we might be going.
The holiday newsletter was one way to share the progress of
our lives with those closest to us. That storyline has become lost in the internet
age. I, for one, feel the poorer for it. On the other hand, I may have lost a holiday
newsletter, but I have gained a blog! And people like you actually read it!
So let me tell you how great my ministry is going and how beautiful
and brilliant my grandkids are…..
Fun, Marshall! I still do a family newsletter most years, and though I don't love doing it, I really like getting such news from others, so it seems only fair...Jan
ReplyDeleteI agree, Marshall! You reflected my feelings of loss from getting that handwritten letter or card from someone we miss. I love tucking away those sweet remembrances, knowing that I can revisit them sometime again.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this blog. I really enjoy them, especially when I'm away! God bless you and Jude. I miss you two!
Vicki