The Royal Mail Time Machine: 19 Years Late, and Still No Refund
If you have ever doubted that time is a flat circle, look no further than Britain’s Royal Mail. Recently, a father in Chester, Paul Edwards, received a package that arrived with the punctuality of a glacier—nineteen years after it was sent. He had ordered a subscription to Mother & Baby magazine back in 2007, presumably to navigate the chaotic waters of raising an eighteen-month-old. Today, that child is a twenty-year-old university student, and her younger brother is nearly an adult, having left the nest long ago.
The package arrived battered, a relic of a bygone era, sporting a charming Royal Mail sticker that read: "We apologize for any inconvenience." It is a masterclass in British understatement. Nineteen years is not an "inconvenience"; it is an epoch. It is a period long enough to witness the rise and fall of political regimes, the birth of the smartphone era, and the complete transformation of the world economy.
But there is something deeply, hilariously human about this. We demand instant gratification from our technology, yet our institutions are still governed by the same sluggish, entropy-driven incompetence that has defined human bureaucracy for millennia. The Royal Mail didn’t "lose" the package; they simply stored it in the collective unconscious of the state, allowing it to ripen like a fine, dusty cheese.
In a world where we obsess over efficiency, this delivery reminds us that our grandest systems are often just glorified chaotic filing cabinets. Paul Edwards didn't get his parenting advice, but he did get a profound existential lesson: don’t hold your breath for the post. The system doesn't care about your deadlines, your stages of life, or your daughter’s developmental milestones. It operates on its own geological timescale. One can only imagine the postal worker who finally scanned this item, perhaps contemplating whether a nineteen-year-old apology is sufficient payment for the loss of nearly two decades of a father’s life. It isn’t, of course, but that is the charm of the modern state—it is always sorry, and it is always late.