by Janis Patterson
Many years ago I was living in an apartment on the east side
of town. I had been typing (yes, it was that long ago!) a manuscript and the
ribbon I had been hoping to nurse along for another day or two simply gave up
the ghost. The impressions on the paper were so faint they were almost
invisible. I had already tried refreshing the ribbon with glycerin, which had
worked fairly well for a while, but there simply wasn’t enough ink left to
refresh.
Giving up, I jumped in the car and ran to the nearest
drugstore. This was an independent store that carried a little bit of
everything and, as it was fairly late at night, I was so grateful they carried
a selection of typewriter ribbons.
Next to the ribbon display was a basket full of thin, 3x3
square yellow pads wrapped in cello. I’d never seen anything like them.
Obviously they were scratch paper, but the pads could not have been over 10-15
sheets thick. They were called Post-Its. The price was ten cents.
I’ve always liked strange things, so I picked up a couple of
pads and went to pay. Over the years I shopped there the store owner had become
sort of a friend, so I asked her about these new things. She sniffed
disdainfully and said something about them being a market test of the newest thing from 3M, but
she was sure they’d made a very expensive marketing mistake. Who would buy a
note with sticky stuff on the back?
Truth to be told, I kind of had to agree with her. I had a
corkboard beside my typewriter, and a small chalkboard, and a roll of tape with
which I could hang notes from other surfaces. Besides, who would pay good money
for scratch paper? I had grown up in my parents’ office, and as far as we were
concerned, scratch paper was the inside of the envelopes that came in the mail.
Matter of fact, one of my very first jobs (I think I was seven or eight) was to
take the discarded envelopes, cut them to roughly the same size and stack the
resultant slips in a shoebox in the supply closet. Then whoever needed scratch
paper could come in and grab some. Recycling did not begin in the ‘80s or the
90s in our family!
Fast forward to today. That wonderful old store has been
closed for at least a quarter of a century, typewriters and their ribbons are
almost antique artifacts, and sticky notes – now brought out by a myriad of
companies under various names – are ubiquitous. From a lukewarm first usage I
have come to love them to an almost fanatical degree. I have different colors
for different things. Different sizes for different usages. On some days there
are so many sticky notes covering my desk it resembles some sort of
rainbow-scaled sea creature.
When an office supply store near us closed not too long ago,
I bought almost their entire stock of sticky notes. One entire drawer of my
desk is devoted to a sticky notes collection of unimaginable variety. There are
the shapes – an apple, a daisy, a star, and more – and of course the classic
3x3 square, but it doesn’t stop there. I have long thin ones, little square
ones, round ones, some half the size of a sheet of typing paper. Some even have
lines or whimsical designs. Some are pastel, some are violently neon. The only
color I have never seen in a sticky note is white. I have also discovered one
of the great secrets of the universe – a quick print shop has a big paper
cutter that for very little money will cut these pads in halves or thirds,
giving you a custom size. You can even buy preprinted ones that say “Sign Here”
or “Note Change” and other industry-specific things.’
Sticky notes are nice, convenient and have myriads of uses,
but they aren’t the end-all or be-all. As with most modern luxuries we could
live very well without them, however much we might protest. Cork boards and
chalkboards and cut-up envelopes still work, but they are nowhere near as
colorful – nor as fun.
10 comments:
One good use for them is as reminders to post on your wall as you write or on the frig for appointments. Truthfully, I mostly use my calendars as reminders. I just check each morning for due dates of various things.
I had a great chuckle one day when I walked into a friend's office and her computer monitor was completely covered in sticky notes. I pulled a few off - so I could see her screen better - and showed her the sticky notes apps. Not as much fun but at least she can she her screen. She still uses the post it notes - they are all over the wall now. Fun post.
I can't do without them! I love them! And, yes, I remember typewriter ribbons, I'm that old.
And, I also use my calendar for notes, although sometimes it ends up being buried beneath other papers of stuff I feel the need to keep near me.
What a delightful post! I laughed out loud. I've seen some people put sticky-notes on their calendars, but I hardly ever use them myself. Thanks for a nice way to start my day.
I am a HUGE post it fan, and I also have them in all shapes and colors. They cover the desk, the monitor, the drawers...I love them when revising a manuscript. I did discover the sticky note button on my computer, and I love it, too, lol
I don't miss typewriters and ribbons much -- except when my computer crashes before a backup!
My mother was famous in the office she managed for her use of sticky notes. She still uses them, though she's retired.
My favorite of her uses is when she beta reads one of my manuscripts. It comes back to me bristling like a rainbow porcupine!
Marian Allen, Author Lady
Fantasies, mysteries, comedies, recipes
Sticky notes are the bomb--as my great grandson would say. He's 3.
Oooo, I almost wish an office supply store would go out of business here. I would max out my credit card, but would I ever have good stuff!
No one knows what will take off and what won't, I think.
There's nothing like a colorful post-it note to remind of something you have to do. I've been know to leave a post-it note on my bathroom mirror when I need a reminder first thing in the morning.
and there are digital sticky notes! I use them but somehow they are not quite as satisfying to me. Perhaps I miss crumpling them up when I've completed the task and throwing it away!
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