Sunday, September 20, 2015

You Have GOT To Be Kidding Me!!

I came home one day this past week to find that a package I had ordered had arrived in the mail that day.
When I saw the box sitting on the table where my husband had set it, it occurred to me that it wasn't a very big box to hold what I knew to be inside.
That right there scared me a little bit, already.
Then I picked it up and I could hear things knocking together inside.
Fragile things.
Um - not a good sign, right?
It was also dented - a little smashed on one corner.
Seriously, I was getting upset - and I hadn't even opened it yet!
I decided to take pictures of every step as I opened the package - you know, for evidence.
(I am not showing you all of the pictures here.)
I figured I needed to document how they'd been packaged if I was going to have to try and get reimbursed - or whatever.
When I carefully CUT open the top of the box and lifted it open, this is what I saw:
Excuse me! (?#%@&*!!!)
Again - this - (see photo taken by bewildered recipient, below) - NO bubble wrap, no tissue, no wrapping nor protection of ANY kind and two items inside that are nearly 50 years old, and quite fragile.
Like, "they-could-chip-if-you-look-at-them-cross-eyed" kind of fragile.
Seriously, folks have you EVER??
What kind of person packages something like that?
O.M.G.
And this was not even a sturdy box, but a thin "no protection from getting smashed" type of food packaging box.
Remove the items - nothing left inside, see:
Oh, I mean nothing except a couple of little tell-tale paint scrapes on the side there where my fragile, collectible, beautiful items rubbed against the side of the box in transit.
Here's one more shot of that flimsy box - just for effect, you know:
And yet - this is a miracle, there's no other way to explain it - somehow, they made it from Pennsylvania all the way to California without getting smashed to smithereens.
Here's the proof:
And here:
 They are in remarkably good condition, despite the poor packaging.
I absolutely could not believe my eyes.
One more look at their crowded quarters where they resided, side by side, for their journey across our great nation:
Boy, oh boy - am I lucky or what??
"Lucky, indeed", she said, in the understatement of the century.
And I am very, VERY happy that they made it here safely.
Yes, I surely am.
But not too happy with the person who mailed them.

7 comments:

  1. I was going to say "What an idiot" but I don't want to be impolite. I am so so glad for you that they made it safely. They are really great! I once ordered a group of china dishes and they came in a box made for display at the store, I think two out of a group of twelve were okay. That has been years ago. Enjoy your lovely ladies, and I hope they don't need to travel again. Love T

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  2. Oh my goodness, I'm so glad they made it. I would have cried if they had broken.

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  3. Unbelievable!! In packaging and the fact they survived. I'm amazed.

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  4. You're absolutely right to feel indignant, but that flimsy packaging (a Manwich box, really?) is just killing me...
    Heidi Ann, having been a fan of your blog for ages and constantly marveling at the nifty treasures from the past that you keep unearthing for our nostalgic enjoyment, I have come to think that you, dear girl, travel under a very special star...or perhaps, it's just all your positive energy that you put into this blog coming back to you! Anyroad, I'm so glad that these treasures arrived unharmed.

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  5. Thank you everyone! And - Phyl D, that is one of the nicest things anyone has ever said to me. You have no idea how much that means to me.

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  6. It's mind boggling how the post office can safely deliver a package like this, but then crush and destroy other packages that have been so carefully packaged. Those contents are one insanely fabulous score. Jealous, jealous, jealous.

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  7. Crazy packaging - so glad your items were not destroyed!

    Laurie S

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