Before the internet, people awaited the postman. He came in the morning, delivered newspapers, magazines, letters in envelopes. The smell of fresh printing ink, the rustling of paper, the intrigue — what's inside? Today's "morning mail" is email, notifications in messengers, podcasts. But the essence remains: the morning begins with news. We tell you how the morning mail has changed, what we've lost and gained.
In the 19th century, the postman came twice a day. In the morning, before breakfast. People went to the gate, took envelopes, examined the stamps. Children awaited postcards, lovers — letters, merchants — bills. In villages, mail was delivered once a week, and it was an event.
In the Soviet Union, the postman was an esteemed figure. He knew everyone by face, delivered newspapers "Pravda," "Izvestia," magazines "Ogonyok," "Krokodil." Subscribers awaited the morning mail from 7 am. For many pensioners, the newspaper was the only window to the world.
The morning mail formed the daily routine. While a person sipped coffee, read the news, discussed them with the family. Then they went to work. This ritual was lost in the 2000s when the internet came into every home.
In 2026, there are almost no paper letters left. Bills, advertisements, government notifications — that's all. But there are enthusiasts who are reviving the tradition: they write each other handwritten letters, put dried flowers or stickers in envelopes. This is the "slow mail" movement. People say, "Letters on the screen will be read and deleted. Paper ones will be kept, read years later."
There are few postmen left, and they are replaced by couriers. In Russia, the post office operates, but delivery times are long (5-10 days). Young people are not used to filling out envelopes, putting down indexes. Morning paper mail is a dying tradition.
But there are advantages: elderly people sitting at home look forward to the postman as a guest. For them, it's social interaction. Therefore, Russian Post continues to deliver to the home for pensioners and disabled people (free of charge).
In 2026, most mornings begin with checking email. We open the laptop or phone, see dozens of messages: work, advertisements, spam. It's good if there's a personal letter from a friend (a rarity). Morning email is often tasks and obligations. "Make a report," "Pay the bill," "Remind about the webinar."
Psychologists say it's harmful to check email in the morning. You start the day with others' problems, not your own. It's better to have breakfast, do exercises, and then enter the world of notifications. But few listen.
Some use filters: mark important letters, archive the rest. Services like Unroll.Me help unsubscribe from spam. But still, morning email overloads the mind.
For many, the morning "mail" is a podcast on the way to work. News episodes, talk shows, digests. You listen and it's as if you're receiving a letter from the host. Podcasts create the illusion of communication.
Radio — an old format, but alive. "Morning Show" on "Russian Radio," "Maxim," "Silver Rain" — people turn them on while driving in traffic. There are news, music, pranks. This is also a kind of morning mail, only auditory.
Video blogs: YouTube and TikTok are full of "morning reviews." A blogger talks over a cup of coffee about what happened in the world, laughs at memes. Subscribers feel "in the know."
At 6 am, a message from the boss comes in. At 7, from mom. At 8, from a friend complaining about life. Messengers (Telegram, WhatsApp, Signal) are an endless stream. People often wake up and look at "Telegram" first.
Pros: fast, convenient, can send voice messages. Cons: information noise, snap thinking, stress. You don't have time to wake up and you already have to respond to someone. Experts advise: don't take the phone in your hands for at least 30 minutes after waking up.
Some set "Do Not Disturb" until 9 am. But not everyone has access to this (for example, doctors, taxi drivers, couriers).
Each generation has its own ritual. For grandmothers: get up, brew tea, sit by the window with a newspaper. For mothers: check the school chat, respond to teachers. For children: scroll through TikTok (while parents are not looking). For office workers: open the laptop with the first cup of coffee.
In 2026, "digital detox" in the morning is popular: leave the phone in another room, read a paper book, listen to silence. Some have a habit: write three thank-yous in a diary first, then — mail.
Psychologists recommend "morning pages" — three pages of handwritten text about what's on your mind. This clears the mind before the information noise.
Morning mail is our connection to reality. A letter from a friend reminds us that we're not alone. A utility bill — that we're part of the economy. Spam — that they want to sell us something. Even if it's annoying, without news, we feel anxiety. Man is a social creature. We need to know what's happening out there, beyond our room.
Mail is a bridge. To the past (paper letters), to the present (email), to the future (podcasts). It changes form, but not essence.
In 2026, scientists are experimenting with "smell mail" — sending scents. Imagine: in the morning, you receive a package with the smell of coffee or the sea. Perhaps this will be a new morning tradition.
Unsubscribe from all newsletters you don't read. Keep only the important ones (work, family, hobbies). Set up folders: "Urgent," "Read Later," "Archive." Use the "two-minute rule": if a response takes less than two minutes, do it immediately. Otherwise, put it off.
Don't check email in the first 30 minutes after waking up — this is time for meditation, exercise, breakfast. Don't check before bedtime — it disrupts sleep. Set a time for morning mail: for example, 8:30-8:45. Don't go there at other times.
Sort through paper mail (bills, advertisements) once a week. Pay immediately if necessary. Don't hoard.
No matter what happens with formats, morning mail is about relationships. A letter from mom, a postcard from a friend, a bill from utility companies — behind all this are people. In 2026, when artificial intelligence writes texts, the living word becomes even more valuable.
In the morning, when you open the mail, remember: once letters were written with a pen, sealed with wax, sent by carrier pigeons. And all this for the sake of saying: "You're not alone. I'm thinking of you."
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