As Long as There’s Still a Mailbox

There was a rumor going around recently that the mail might stop someday.
Not tomorrow, not next week, but the kind of quiet talk people say like it’s inevitable — everything going digital, everything getting faster, everything needing less paper, less waiting, less space to hold things. Most people hear that and think about bills, junk mail, catalogs they never asked for.

I heard it, and all I could think was,
one day there might be a last letter.

Not the kind where you know it’s the last.
Not something marked with an ending.
Just the kind you send without realizing that someday there won’t be another envelope after it.

Letters have never been just letters to me.
They’re pieces of time you can hold in your hands.
Proof that someone stopped long enough to feel something, long enough to write it down, long enough to believe it was worth the effort to send. Ink takes longer than typing. Stamps take longer than hitting send. Waiting takes longer than refreshing a screen. And maybe that’s why it matters so much — because nothing about it is instant, so nothing about it feels careless.

For the last few years, sending mail has been one of the steadiest things in my life.
Not because life was steady, but because the letters were.
No matter how much changed, I could still sit down, pick a card, find a pen that worked, and write to someone who mattered.

And it was never just a letter.

It was photos from a random day that felt too important to keep to myself.
Polaroids with the colors a little off but the memory still right.
Receipts, pressed flowers, scraps of paper with things I meant to say but didn’t know how to fit into a sentence.
Little notes written at midnight.
Stickers I found and immediately knew who they belonged to.
Tiny pieces of my life folded in half, then folded again, then tucked carefully into an envelope like I was trying to make the distance smaller by filling the space with proof that I was thinking of them.

There’s something about sealing an envelope that feels different than ending a conversation.
Once it’s closed, you can’t change the words.
You can’t unsend it.
You just have to trust that what you wrote was honest enough, real enough, that when it gets opened on the other end it will still mean what you meant when you wrote it.

So when people talk about the mail changing, slowing down, disappearing someday…
it doesn’t sound like a small thing to me.

It sounds like someone telling me there might be a day where I can’t do this anymore.
A day where there isn’t a stamp to press into the corner.
A day where there isn’t a mailbox waiting at the end of the driveway.
A day where I can’t slide a photograph into a card or tuck a little keepsake between the pages and send it across the miles like a quiet reminder that someone, somewhere, is still thinking about you.

And the truth is, the sadness isn’t really about the postal service.

It’s about what the letters mean.

They mean there was someone worth writing to.
They mean there was distance, but not so much distance that it couldn’t be crossed.
They mean there was a season of my life where love — or friendship, or whatever name you give to the people who feel like home — looked like ink stains on my fingers and envelopes stacked on my desk waiting for stamps.

They mean there was a time where I could hold something in my hands and know it was on its way to someone who mattered.

Maybe the mail isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.
Realistically, it probably isn’t.
But the thought that it could someday makes me realize how much of my life is tied up in something as simple as paper and ink and the belief that if you send something out into the world with enough care, it will find where it’s supposed to go.

One day there will be a last letter.
Not because the world ends.
Not because the feeling ends.
Just because life moves the way it always does, and seasons close without asking if you’re ready.

One day there will be an envelope I don’t send.
A photo I keep instead of folding in half.
A note I write and never seal.
A memory that stays in my hands instead of traveling across the miles.

And maybe that’s why I keep sending them now.
Why I keep adding one more stamp, one more picture, one more little piece of a life I don’t want to forget.
Why I keep tucking pieces of my days into envelopes like I’m afraid that if I don’t send them somewhere, they won’t feel real.

Because as long as there’s still a mailbox,
as long as there are still stamps,
as long as there’s still an address I know by heart,

I want there to be proof
that distance didn’t stop me,
that time didn’t stop me,
that life didn’t make me too busy to care.

I want there to be proof that I tried to reach them.