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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Living. Lovely. ~ A Handwritten Letter


And none will hear the postman's knock

Without a quickening of the heart.

For who can bear to feel himself forgotten?

~W.H. Auden




Did anyone

Send a Handwritten Letter

this week?


With the advent of emails and texting, do you still write letters often?
Did you ever enjoy writing letters in the past?
Have you ever had a penpal?
Do you enjoy receiving a handwritten letter?
Does a handwritten letter feel differently than an email or phone call?
What is the best letter you have ever received?




Speaking of letter writing...
I have a give-away coming Friday!
Don't miss it!




(Scroll down for next week's Living. Lovely. challenge.)


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I loved getting mail when I was younger.
I'd race to the mailbox each day.
I loved catalogs. I loved magazines.
I really loved letters.

I had several penpals over the years.
A boy in Korea.
A girl I met at summer camp.

An unlikely and unexpected friendship formed when I was in second grade with a much older student.
She wanted to be a teacher and made up these lovely worksheets for me to do.
I can still picture them in my head.
Call me crazy. I loved worksheets. I loved the star chart she made for me.
I was devestated when she moved away.
And then the packet came in the mail. More worksheets lovingly handwritten.

After I outgrew the worksheets, we continued to write on occasion.
I have seen her only once since second grade...10 years later I attended her wedding.
Is it any surprise that she became a teacher and I became a homeschooling mom?
To this day, almost 30 years later, we continue to exchange Christmas cards.

I saved most of the notes passed in class during highschool.
Hundreds, it seems, from my best friend, Char.


Russ and I had a long-distance relationship for a few months.
I can't tell you what it meant to get letters from him.
This was before email...but he did send send me a fax at work on occasion.
I saved all of those, too. Grin.

Now I'm in the mood to go through my box of old letters....

I rarely mail hand-written letters anymore.

My boys do have penpals, though.
They exchange letters and pictures with the boys from Thoughts of Home.
We set to work this week on the latest batch of words and drawings.



I also sent a get-well card to a friend,
and notes with updated pictures of the boys to grandparents.
(Yes, Grandma and Grandpa, yours is in the mail. Grin.)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Our next Living. Lovely. challenge:

Read Something Lovely

Something soul-affirming. Something beautiful.
Something your mind can ponder after you've set the words down.
Poetry. Literature. Quotes. Lyrics. Memoir. Letters. Devotional.

Spend time interacting with the ideas and images that linger in your mind.
Think on things that are lovely.

Why should we think upon things that are lovely?
Because thinking determines life.
It is a common habit to blame life upon the environment.
Environment modifies life but does not govern life.
The soul is stronger than its surroundings.

~William James



It is one of my favorite books I've read this year, truly on my all-time favorites list.
I'll share more next Thursday, but for now I leave you with this quote:

pp. 30-31

The writer does want to be published; the painter urgently hopes that someone will see the finished canvas (van Gogh was denied the satisfaction of having his work bought and appreciated during his lifeitme; no wonder the pain was more than he could bear); the composer needs his music to be heard. Art is communication, and if there is no communication it is as though the work has been stillborn.

The reader, viewer, listener, usually grossly underestimates his importance. If a reader cannot create a book along with the writer, the book will never come to life. Creative involvement: that's the basic difference between reading a book and watching TV. In watching TV we are passive; sponges; we do nothing. In reading we must become creators. Once the child has learned to read along and can pick up a book without illustrations, he must become a creator, imagining the setting of the story, visualizing the characters, seeing facial expressions, hearing the inflection of voices. The author and the reader "know" each other; they meet on the bridge of words.

9 comments:

  1. I didn't quite live up to my grand intentions of lots of letter-writing this week, but I did send out a thank you note! Thanks for the inspiration. =)

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  2. mmm... I come. I read. I sigh. I smile. I leave refreshed. I've missed you, I hope to have more regular computer time soon.

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  3. I really enjoyed myself with this week's challenge! My post:

    http://mollythepirate.blogspot.com/2009/10/handwritten-letter.html

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  4. I sent a postcard to my friend this week...I know it's not a letter, but still...:o)
    I'd send you a postcard too if I knew your address ..:o)

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  5. I did write a letter this week! To my grandma, who I'd heard was very excited to receive a letter from me a couple of weeks ago. Knowing how much this can perk up her day, I really need to make a committment to do it more often.

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  6. We have 'Tea Tuesday' here every week. We make some tea and sit down and write to friends and family. Then we enclose a bag of tea in their letter so they can sit down and sip some tea while reading our letter.

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  7. oh, it's been so long since i've sat and "visited" i've forgotten the lovely challenge! but since we've celebrated 2 birthdays in the past 2 months, i have been overseeing hand written thank you notes, does that count? (and it is no small feat to convince my newly turned 4 yo that his name is spelled p-e-t-e-r instead of what *he* insists: p-t-e-e-r.

    but i already have a lovely book picked out for next week. i'm slowly coming out of that frog-in-a-boiling-pot-of-water feeling i've been in since bringing all my kids back home to school and daily caring for my niece's lovely 11week old *and* taking my 86yo father in law for his doctor appointments.

    so lovely to visit with *you* heidi!
    jodi in pa

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  8. I've just discovered your blog... I love your ideas for challenges! It's so sad that the art of hand-written letters has been lost... I, too, agree that there is nothing like receiving a bit of thoughtful mail... May I join in on the challenges? And the book you're reading sounds wonderful. So true...

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  9. Got them today! If I were Mt. Hope Chronicles I would have lovely photographs to prove their arrival. But I'm not. ;)

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