No doubt the 21st century is the age of information boom: SMS, emails, social networking sites among others, but it has unfortunately, sounded a death knell for the much-loved art of yore: letter writing.
Gone are the days when lovers professed their undying love to each other through letters. Feelings are now expressed through SMS, using emoticons. The home-sick hosteller no longer writes home, he e-mails!
The coming of the internet and mobiles has shrunk the world, but at the same time, it has done away with the personal touch that was there in communication. I may sound old-fashioned, but I think the feeling of reading a letter, holding an inland in your hand is unbeatable.
Though it takes a fraction of a second to write an email, but the time used to pen a letter is actually time invested in some meaningful activity.
All of us have time constraints and so we want to do things in a jiffy. But in our quest to be fast, we have failed to see that technology has, despite bridging the distance between bodies, increased the distance between hearts. I still remember the days when I used to receive letters from my cousins, each syllable, the handwriting, captured my imagination.
People say that emails have made life easier; I feel they have made it dry. A sense of detachment prevails over the mails I receive from friends and relatives.
I still write letters to my friends, but the time constraint has engulfed me as well and I too, email. At the same time, however, I feel that the art of letters should be revived as it bonds people together like no email can.