Why you shouldn't send Christmas cards.
Jeez, what
a waste of paper and postage! Do me a favor, friends and relatives: Instead,
please PayPal me the cost of the card and postage. I figure $2.99 plus the
$0.44 postage stamp should cover it. You find that Grinch-y? Tough sugar cookies.
I don't have kids, I don't have a dead tree fire hazard, and my cats will
destroy my house if I try to put Santa caps on them. So, you'll not be
receiving a card from me. I'll look at your card, say, "That's nice," and toss
it into the junk mail bin. In essence, you've paid $3.43 plus your time
to contribute to California's recycling program. Your card will probably come back
as a coffee cup insulator, which would be a preferable alternative to the card itself.
Skip me and tape the card to your next latte.
When I
was married, my wife would slap these annoying cards on the refrigerator, doorframes,
and staircases. She appreciates the cards because she is a nice person. I,
however, am an asshole. I hated them. We didn't have kids and were in
the middle of pills and shots and whacking off into a cup at the hospital and
suppositories and hurry-home-my-temperature-is-right quickies, and all of them at
quite a substantial sum. I didn't need to be reminded how easy it was for some
people to plant baby seeds. Damn braggarts. I so wanted to send our holiday
card as a picture of my genetic soup puddled inside a
sterile cup.
See?
Told you I'm a green Grinch-y asshole.
Look
here. I just received the 2011 holiday postcard from the Whateverberg family.
We have Daddy in a silly red sweater who is out of breath from sprinting
back-and-forth to the camera timer, Mommy with dark circles under her eyes and tinsel
in her hair, two self-entitled rugrats who have fallen for a cruel myth used to
make them behave, and the family dog that was licking his red rocket during the
three previous takes. How sweet. Buh-bye, obnoxious card. To the junk pile with
you. I hope you enjoy your equally useless and wasteful company, which is
advertising vinyl siding, curb painting, and closet organizers.
I watch
people as they stand in front of the greeting card display case. They scan,
lift, open, read, return, and move on until they finally find that perfect card
and spend the next five minutes hunting for the missing envelope. Oh, how I
want to confront this person.
"You do
realize the person you send that to probably won't read it."
"Huh?"
"All I
do when I receive a card is look inside for cash or checks, then flip it over
to see how much the sender wasted on sending me somebody else's quote."
"But …"
"No but.
Where's the thought and creative energy in that? At least if you send me a
family photo, it's original—boring as watching mold grow, but original."
"Do I
know you?"
"Consider
me one of the ninety-nine percenters who is here to encourage you to stimulate
the economy in more logical ways. Why don't you bake me some cookies? I like
chocolate and peanut butter; any combination of the two will do just fine. Oh,
and don't put a card in the tin. Simply write your name with a Sharpie on the
outside. I won't need your return address. You'll get squat from me in return unless
I run into you when I'm with a relatively full bottle, in which case I'll pour
you a holiday sip of my grapeness."
"Um …
security …"
It
saddens me to watch the deluded masses who can't escape the Hallmark ploy.
Published on December 05, 2011 12:26
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