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Life Insurance JokesMail to the DeadScott Hanson is a news reporter and anchor with WESH-Channel 2 in Orlando. My father died on Jan 02, 1995. He left no forwarding address. Therefore, it fell to me to collect his mail. I didn't expect much really, since my sisters and I had been careful to notify his bank, insurance agent and a host of other businesses that one of their customers was no more. You would think a death notice would cut down on the amount of correspondence from those firms. Quite the contrary. Instead -- for months, mind you -- my deceased father continued to receive mail from companies that had been told of his passing but pressed on, determined to contact him anyway. The first to hope for a reply from beyond the grave was my father's bank. Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear Phoenix Branch, Later that same week, I receive this note from Dad's insurance company. Again, this is a firm that had been told in no uncertain terms of his death. Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear Insurance Agent, The next day, I went to my mailbox to find this: Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear Psychic Reader, A few months of calm passed, and then these arrived: Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear San Diego District Office, I am writing to you for the third time
now to tell you my father died in January. Since then, the number of checks
he's written has dropped dramatically. Being dead, he has no plans to
use his overdraft protection or pay even the minimum amount due for a
service he no longer needs. As for future borrowing needs, well, don't
hold your breath. Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear Collection Agency, A few more months, and: Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear Los Angeles Regional Office, Dear Mr. Hanson, Dear Insurance Agent's Collection Agency, You may contact my father via
the enclosed 900 number. It has now been a couple of months since I've heard from these firms. Either the people writing these letters finally believe my father is Dead, or they themselves have died and are now receiving similar correspondence. Actually, there has been a lesson in these letters. Any one of them would be cause for great worry, if sent to a living person. The dead are immune from corporate bullying. There's nothing like dying to put business correspondence in its proper perspective. Perhaps that's the best reason not to fear death. There's no post office there. By Scott Hanson, from the Orlando Sentinel Star newspaper
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