There are still repercussions from enduring the theft of my credit card number back in July. Sixty days ago. Two months. UGH.
Remember when bills came in an envelope? A real envelope. With a stamp, a return envelope, and sometimes even a cheery insert trying to upsell you a second phone line or an encyclopedia set? You wrote a check, licked the flap, and felt the deep satisfaction of done. Those were the days.
Fast-forward to now. Every “bill” is buried inside an email or an app, with logins, two-factor authentication, and dropdown menus that look like a video game. Instead of a sense of closure, I'm still getting a glowing red banner: “There was an issue with your recent payment that will impact your insurance coverage. Your payment of $1,616.30 scheduled for 9/12/2025 was declined by your financial institution.”
Well, excuse me. I’m not trying to run from the mob here — just paying my insurance premium. But the way these systems word it, you’d think I was laundering money through an offshore account. Every day charges were easy to upgrade to the new number, expiration date and secret code. But some are things I pay less frequently.
And here’s the kicker: back in the envelope days, if a check bounced (rare, but it happened), the bank politely mailed you a notice on heavy paper stock. Now, it’s all caps and exclamation points, as though I need to be marched down to the Fraud Department in handcuffs.
Meanwhile, the subscriptions I didn’t ask for renew quietly in the background: a streaming service I watched free for a week last spring and missed the cancel date by 3 hours so I had to pay for a whole month. (Silver lining in this one, they lured me back with a half price membership if I signed up for a year! Yea BritBox!)
Maybe the fatigue isn’t just about money. It’s about the constant management. A lifetime of collecting stamps, licking envelopes, and trusting the U.S. Mail trained us to believe payment was an act of closure. Now it feels like a full-time job: monitoring apps, double-checking logins, and proving to robots that I’m not a robot. Not the end of the world, for sure, but annoying anyway.
Still, I keep plugging away, because that’s what grown-ups do. But every time I get another “issue with your recent payment” message, I want to dig out my old checkbook, write the number in perfect cursive, and send it off with a 20-cent stamp. Just to show them who’s boss.
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