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Keep in touch!

There is a change in the air that whispers “fall” and the heat of the sun is less intense.  One last burst of summer joy is approaching before our regular routines resume.  Summer is drawing to a close.  If only we could make it last. .  . we drag out feet towards the fall.

Did you capture summer moments in photos?  Perhaps you are gathering in the best fruits of the season for preservation in jars.  Or did you write postcards to your friends and family back home, sharing the highlights of your summer vacation?  There is something magic about summer moments that  makes us want  hold them forever.

Our desire to hold on to the best of summer is completely understandable.  Have you met new friends, perhaps even fallen in love?  Some of those connections are worth cultivating, a big  challenge as we return to our packed schedules.

You may have exchanged emails and phone numbers but the absolute best way to connect is with a hand written note. A few lines or a doodle on a post card breathes life into a long distance friendship, delivering tangible evidence of your connection, and is a true gift.   Your hand written note may even inspire one in return.
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Keeping in touch with a hand written note invites your new acquaintance into the other side of summer: your everyday life.  Such notes are the slow cuisine of communications:  a bit of your heart and spirit mixed thoughtfully with time, ink and paper yields a result that the receiver may savour for years.   Your note need not replace the convenience of digital communication but it certainly enhances the flavour of your connection.

I once received a postcard from a friend living only a couple of hundred kilometers from me announcing that he was going to be out of touch for a while due to an emergency at work.  He could have phoned but the hasty scrawl on the back of a postcard featuring a moose meant, in his haste, he was thinking of me.  I still have the postcard and our relationship, now a marriage, is in its third decade.  Keeping in touch with a hand written message can mean the start rather than the end of a season.

“Summer afternoon—summer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language.”
― Henry James

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