Life Kit - The art and pleasure of writing a letter
Episode Date: April 15, 2025In her new book, Syme's Letter Writer, Rachel Syme of The New Yorker explains how to write a delightful letter to a loved one. Unlike texting and email, old-fashioned letters, hand-addressed and sent ...in the mail, are "read intentionally," she says. Syme offers advice on what to write about, how to find the perfect stationery, and how to find a pen pal.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's Amartines. Even as the host of a news show, it can be hard to keep up with the headlines.
That is why we make the Up First Podcast. Every morning in under 15 minutes, we cover three major
stories with context and analysis from reporters around the world so you can catch up on lo que está
pasando while getting ready, making desayuno, or going to work. So listen to the Up First Podcast from NPR.
You're listening to Life Kit from NPR. Hey everybody, it's Mariel. There is a scene in
the Jane Austen novel Pride and Prejudice where the main character, Lizzie Bennet, receives
a letter from her will-they-won they, hate you, love you, sexy crush
man Mr. Darcy. He actually hands it to her in person. It's really dramatic. And
when I tell you the anticipation I felt as she opened the envelope, the way I
got butterflies in my stomach the first time I read this letter, I felt like I
was her. That obviously says a lot about the immersive magic of a good book,
but also about the potency of a well-written letter. The drama, the intrigue, the focused
attention that it drums up in the recipient. Rachel, Simon and I are kindred spirits in
this way.
I loved reading like novels that turned on a letter. I loved, you know, watching You've
Got Mail and the Shop Around the Corner and
all these sort of films about correspondence and reading Jane Austen novels. You know,
I just loved the idea of letter writing.
Rachel is a writer for The New Yorker, and she just published a beautiful book called
Sime's Letter Writer. It is a guide for how to get into letter writing. And she says there
are a lot of reasons to go down this rabbit hole.
I think the first one that is really simple and kind of broad is just that it's enjoyable,
that it's fun, that it is a way to spend your life and spend your time that actually
has tangible results attached to it, and that you're building something with someone else,
you're building a relationship, you're building an archive, you're building a body of work.
Not a lot of people can say that about something they do that's just past the time.
It's also a way to stay in the practice of writing and it can help you form and nurture
relationships that are unlike any others in your life.
Because they are sort of divorced from time and expectation in a way that pretty much
no other relationships are. Like my friends, I'm in group chats with them, texts with
them, they're constantly available, I'm constantly available. We're pinging each
other all the time. I'm calling my family all the time. I'm checking in all the time
with work people. The thing about the people that I write letters to is that, I mean, it's like the slow cooker of friendship.
I'll write a letter to them.
Maybe it'll arrive at their house,
given the vagaries of the postal system in two weeks.
They'll read it,
and I know that it will be read intentionally.
And I have found that to be such a delightful rhythm when it is sort of contrasted
against everything else that's bombarding us. Rachel is uniquely qualified to teach us about
the pleasures of letter writing because a few years ago during the pandemic she was looking
for a way to spend less time on screens and more time connecting with people.
So she went on social media, I know, ironic, and said, basically, does anyone want to be
my pen pal?
I got like 300 responses and I realized, oh my gosh, I can't possibly write a letter to
all these people, but there's some kind of need here or desire.
So I have to find a way to connect all these people to one another so they can get writing
to each other.
Rachel started a program called Penpalooza, which now has 10,000 members from more than
75 countries.
And she met some of her best friends this way.
So today on LifeKit, how to write letters to your friends, your family, that person
who changed your life, your lovers, and even strangers.
We'll give you some writing prompts,
talk about stationery and embellishments, and how to use this practice as a creative opportunity.
These days there is a lot of news. It can be hard to keep up with what it means for you, your family, and your community. Consider This from NPR is a podcast that helps you
make sense of the news. Six days a week, we bring you a deep dive on a story and provide
the context, backstory, and analysis you need to understand our rapidly changing world.
Listen to the Consider This podcast from NPR.
Cell phones, cars, coffee. How do these goods make their way to us from overseas and what
will President Trump's tariffs mean for their price tags? Join the 1A podcast as we explore
supply chains and costs associated with some of your favorite products. It's our series,
How Did This Get Here, every Wednesday. Listen to the 1A podcast from NPR and WAMU.
Do you remember when discovering a new artist felt like finding buried treasure?
At All Songs Considered, NPR's music recommendation podcast, we put that kind
of magic back into discovering new tracks.
We're here to make the hunt for new music easy, delivering you the cream of the
crop from every genre.
We'll help you make music feel fun again, only on all songs
considered from NPR. Want to know what's happening in the world? Listen to the
State of the World podcast. Every weekday we bring you important stories from
around the globe. In just a few minutes you might hear how democracy is holding
up in South Korea or meet Indian monkeys that have turned to crime. We don't go
around the world, we're already there.
Listen to the State of the World podcast from NPR.
Okay, well, let's say I'm curious.
Yep.
You're letter curious.
I'm letter curious.
Correspondence curious.
I'm thinking about sending my first letter.
What language do you use when you are trying to, I'm not even going to say level up, I'm sending my first letter. Yep. What language do you use when you are trying to, I'm not even going to say level up, I'm
going to say go down this other avenue with a friend and you want to start writing letters
to them.
What do you actually say?
I mean, in this day and age, I think you have to sort of couch it in a little bit of like
a silliness.
So you have to say something along the lines of, I just got the most beautiful stationery
and I've been dying to use it and write a letter to somebody. So you have to say something along the lines of, I just got the most beautiful stationery,
and I've been dying to use it,
and write a letter to somebody.
Would it be interesting to you if I wrote to you?
Or, you know, say, I'm interested in writing more.
I'm trying to get more intentional about my writing.
I think one way to really sell it to people is,
say, I'm trying to get off the internet.
I'm trying to do less being on my Instagram at two in the morning and
instead hanging out with my fountain pen and do more sort of purposeful, slow communication
with the people that I care about. I'm making an active effort to do it and I would love
you to be the recipient of this attention.
You can also write to strangers, right? How might you find strangers to write to? So social media is probably, I mean I hate to say go there because I'm trying to tell everybody to
get off of there in order to write letters, but I think to find somebody to write a letter to,
it's a great place. If there's anyone that's sort of like your mutual on Instagram or you know,
that you've been following for a while and they've been following you,
you can always try to write them a direct message and say like, hey, I'd love to write you a letter.
I'm doing, again, I'm doing this thing, right? Beautiful stationery and I'm trying to
write letters to people. You'd be surprised how far that sort of approach will take you.
There's also, you know, other pen pal exchanges online that you can find.
There's a great site that's been around since I think the 90s called Post Crossing, which
I love, which allows you to send postcards to anyone in the world.
You'll get a bunch of people to send postcards to, but you can always include your return
address and say, I'd love to keep this exchange going. I often, yeah, there's great websites
where you can write letters to prisoners.
You can write letters to,
you could join a mentorship program where you're,
if you're an older woman writer,
there are younger women who wanna become writers
and need mentors and often those relationships
are based in correspondence or in epistolary communication.
I feel like it's kind of like a law of attraction thing. It's like once I started writing letters,
I found a lot more people to write letters to. It just became so like part of my life.
Okay, take away one. If you want to receive letters, start writing letters.
You can reach out to friends and family, ask if anyone's interested in getting a letter
from you.
You could also send a letter to someone who made a difference in your life, your third
grade teacher, or that person who showed you kindness in a moment you really needed it.
And if you want to write to strangers, there are programs you can sign up for.
Or you could send some fan mail.
Rachel talks about that in the book, too.
Write to an author.
Tell them how a certain passage in their book has woven its way into your soul. How you felt alone in the world until someone
else put your exact feeling into words. That kind of thing means a lot to people.
Okay, let's move into the very tactile part of this. Choosing your paper.
Yep. Very personal. Yeah. How do you start to decide, first of paper, how do you start to decide?
First of all, are you handwriting or using a typewriter or even printing off the computer?
And then what paper are you going to use?
Well, I think you should do whatever you want.
It's a free for all, really.
But I write my letters by hand for the most part, though I have Kerbal Tunnel now.
Yeah.
I imagine.
From doing such a thing.
And I mean, I have a really beautiful fountain pen
that I use that's very smooth writer
and doesn't require much of my wrist strength.
But whatever way you choose to actually get
the words on the page, totally up to you.
If you do want to go down the rabbit hole of handwriting
and pens and fountain pens and calligraphy and ballpoint pens and going to the pen store and going nuts. I mean, you can go so far
down that rabbit hole. It's endless and very addictive.
In terms of paper, I mean, again, so personal. I have sort of so many different types of
stationery at this point that I change my mind every single day.
Sometimes it's, you know, a beautiful piece of Florentine stationery.
Some days it's a note card.
Some days it's a postcard.
Some days it's a vintage hotel stationery.
Some days it's onion skin paper because I love the way that that feels.
Some days it's this pink notepads that I write on because I learned that Jacqueline
Suzanne who wrote Value the Dolls always wrote on pink notepads that I write on because I learned that Jacqueline Suzanne,
who wrote Value the Dolls,
always wrote on pink notepads.
And for some reason, I just like had an instant craving
for pink note, like legal paper,
and then ordered like a hundred of them.
A lot of people I know, you know,
collage their letters, do watercolor,
sort of create their own stationary.
I mean, I have people who I know who have personalized letterhead.
I have other people that will write on found paper, napkins, the back of other things,
you know, recycled other printouts from work.
It really is so open that there are no rules.
I'm opening up to the page where you give writing prompts.
Oh, yeah.
Because I think it could be hard
if you're just writing a letter for the first time
unless it's to congratulate someone on something
or whatever or thank them, to know what to say.
Right, this whole book is one big writing prompt
is how I saw it basically.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But then specifically you have some that I like.
I'm just gonna read a few of them.
Sure. Write a series of them. Sure.
Write a series of letters while sitting on public benches
at the park.
Describe the people who walk past inside a museum.
Describe the art you see while sitting down outside a coffee
shop.
Describe the dogs that trap by.
I mean, it sounds like description
is a great way to go.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that literally, if you
don't know what to write about write about
what you did that day i mean i think i start the book with a section that's called how to write
about the weather um because a lot of people begin their letters with what's going on in the
weather and they apologize for it they go like i'm so sorry like i'm boring you because i'm talking
about how it snowed today and my contention is that there's, there's like a, can be a great thrill in writing about
the seasons and the weather and detail and sensual experience and the way you move through
the world.
And a lot of people don't do that.
Write a detailed account of the last time you got food poisoning.
Do you know what the culprit was?
Did you have that sinking
feeling that eating three-day-old shrimp was a terrible idea? Go into the gory timeline.
Oh, yeah. It's very generative. Everybody remembers and they will never eat that thing
again, whatever it was.
You do have a section in here about how to write a love letter. And that is something
that often involves
imagination, as you note. Like, if you were here, I would do this to you. That's like
a pretty classic formula for sexting.
Steamy.
So, with love letters, any particular tips you want to share?
I think that, you know, a love letter, first of all, you can write a love letter to anyone in your
life, not just somebody that you're in a romantic relationship with. I think what it has to
be about is an act of noticing, an act of sharing certain specific details about the
person. I think that the most well-received love letters and the ones that really stick with people are just memories
and specifics and a sense of what you really, the small details about this person that you've
noticed that only somebody that loves them would notice.
And cataloging those, often love letters contain poetry often they'll contain
Waxing about your future or what you hope that will look like and sometimes it's about the past
It's it's Odick you have to think of yourself as a poet a little bit like what am I singing a song of about this person?
And sometimes it can be like the smallest things that you notice, you know? It can be like a freckle.
It can be a day that you were together and they said something and it's always stuck
with you.
And you can, again, write these kinds of letters to anyone in your life that has had great
meaning.
That's beautiful.
Oh, thanks.
Takeaway two, get so creative with this.
A letter can be about anything you want.
Some more prompts from the book, make your own mad libs, take polaroids of your life
for a week and drop them in an envelope with a message on the back of each one.
And draw a map of a stroll you often take through your neighborhood with pinpoints and
descriptions of your favorite memories at each spot.
Okay, you also have an idea in here to mail recipes.
Love mailing recipes.
Yeah, what is so magical about that?
I think it's like we're going back to this sort of hand-honed tradition, a thing that would pass down through generations
as much as I love like, I love, like, I love
recipe books, I love family recipe books. So if you have your own recipes that you can
pass along, I think of letters in many ways as creating an archive. And what's funny
is like, you can't really see the archive you're creating unless you get together with
the person you wrote letters to and said like, let's pair our letters and they'll be in
one archive forever. Although in the book, I encourage people to take pictures of the letters you're
sending so you have copies of what you've done in case you ever want your side of the
correspondence. But you are creating an archive of your work out there somewhere in the world.
And I think recipes are the product of, you know, trial, error, generational secrets passed
down. And so sending it along to somebody else, it's like very intimate too.
Okay, let's talk about embellishments.
Sure.
We want to give our letter a little pizzazz.
Yep.
What would you say are the do's and don'ts here?
I think that letters are one of these places where you can really express unbridled creativity.
I mean, in terms of like what we'll actually get through the postal system, I mean, in terms of like what will actually get through the postal system, I mean, there's a lot of sort of, if you glue a bunch of stuff on, googly eyes, and you know, it won't make
it, at least through the traditional mail system.
So there's, you know, flat things you can mail, ways you can embellish with collage
and stickers and how to make mail art.
I mean, I'm obsessed with mail art.
Mail art was kind of an art movement that really had a sort of a heyday in the 60s and 70s,
which was where a lot of artists
were actually expressing themselves
by making really ornate envelopes
and seeing what they could move through the male system.
But it's still going strong.
There's TikToks devoted to it.
There's Instagrams.
There's tutorials on YouTube devoted to male art,
how to make something look really beautiful ornate,
lots of interesting sort of origami type envelope folds,
lots of ways you can sort of add ephemera
to both the outside and the inside of your envelope.
I mean, I think letters are a great opportunity
to mail anything flat that excites you.
["The Star-Spangled Banner"] anything flat that excites you. Take away three. Embellish the heck out of this thing. You gotta put some stickers in there.
And then include some tiny flat treasures like pre-wrapped tea bags, ticket stubs,
ornate wine labels, vintage photographs, iron-on patches, and dried flowers. Just
make sure your recipient isn't allergic
first. So if you get into writing letters, I could see that things might just fade
away sometimes. Like you might fall out of the habit or maybe somebody stops
answering you back or like what are some of the common letter writing or like
correspondence snags that people hit?
Well, I think people become quickly overwhelmed because it's not something that they're used to, right?
So it seems really novel and fun when you first get a letter and then you go,
Oh my God, I have to reply to this.
It's a muscle like any other thing that can be worked out.
But, you know, so I think that I think starting small is really, really good and really
healthy. I think that if you don't feel prepared to write a big long letter to somebody, send a
postcard. I also think that a short letter is better than no letter in so much as you might
think, oh gosh, if I don't have the time to respond to this in such a major way, I'm going to be doing
this person a disservice. But the truth is they just want to keep the volley in the air.
And so often, if somebody sends me a really long letter
and I don't have the bandwidth, I'll send a postcard,
or I'll send an interim kind of short letter being like,
loved your letter, moved me.
I'm going to get back to you soon.
But in the meantime, here's a silly, you know, vintage hotel thing.
So there's, I think you can hit snags of being so overwhelmed that you just stop.
And I think maybe the idea is just to keep the ball in the air is really useful.
I think also just sometimes correspondences run their course.
I think that I have several people that I started writing to at the beginning of this
project, for example, that I'm still writing to.
But some people have fallen away or some people our relationship has changed. It started as an epistolary friendship and then we got really
close writing letters and then started texting and calling and that's more of our friendship
now than letters and we constantly say like, we got to get back to writing letters, you
know, but I think they can change and honestly if something like this fizzles out, it's okay.
It's okay. I think in general you should practice kind of like
radical kindness in this letter writing game because the truth is it's really
it's a hobby. It's something that people should be doing for fun, for connection,
for delight. If it's not delighting you then why do it?
Okay so takeaway four, be gentle with yourself and other people.
Letter writing is a hobby after all, and it should be something you're both enjoying.
If not, let this correspondence fizzle.
Pair up with somebody else.
You know, there are about eight billion people in the world.
Okay, you have a page in the book about signature sign-offs.
Yeah.
My favorite from Zora Neale Hurston in a letter to, is it Elaine Locke or Alan Locke?
LA.
Allah.
Allah.
Allah.
I don't know, it's French.
Forgive me, French speakers.
Okay, so in a letter from Zora Neale Hurston, she says,
so long old cabbage. I just freaking love that.
I love that too. I mean, I think in, in France, you know,
people call each other little cabbage,
mon chou or whatever for as a, as a sort of like term of endearment. But, uh,
yeah, I think it's cute. I think you should,
everybody should come up with their own signature sign off.
I think that's a really, that's a think that's a great eccentricity to have.
Will you tell me yours?
Yeah, I mean, I have different ones
that I use for different people.
I often call people kids, so I'll say, you know,
until the next letter, kid.
Write back, kid.
I also say, see you in the mailbox. See you in the mailbox. That's cute.
It's cute. Love to be cute.
Okay, our final takeaway is come up with a signature sign off.
One that is uniquely and unmistakably yours.
Here are some that I'm workshopping.
So long, sweet pea. Bye bye, cutie pie.
See you in my dreams, darlin'.
Catch you next time. weekly and unmistakably yours. Here are some that I'm workshopping. So long sweet pea.
Bye bye cutie pie. See you in my dreams darlin'. Catch you on the astral plane. Y hasta luego
wopple.
Okay, Rachel, thank you so much.
Thank you. I hope people write letters and find joy in this practice.
Okay letter writers, it is time for a recap.
Takeaway one, if you want to get letters, start writing letters.
Reach out to friends and family, to old acquaintances, and even to strangers.
Takeaway two, if you don't know what to say, start with a writing prompt.
We've shared some here, and you can find more in Rachel's book and also online.
Takeaway three, embellish.
Give that letter some pizzazz. Takeaway four, embellish. Give that letter some pizzazz.
Takeaway four, letter writing is a hobby. Do not turn it into work. Have fun with
it and go with the flow. In takeaway five, come up with a signature sign-off to
rival Zora Neale Hurston's very cheeky, so long old cabbage. For more life kit,
check out our other episodes. We have one on how to write a memoir and another on how to make a really good playlist.
You can find those at npr.org slash LifeKit.
And if you love LifeKit and want even more,
subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash LifeKit newsletter.
Also, we love hearing from you,
so if you have episode ideas or feedback you wanna share,
send us some fan mail.
You can email us at lifekit at npr.org.
This episode of Life Kit was produced by Sam Yellow Horse Kessler. Our visuals editor is
Beck Harlin and our digital editor is Malika Gareeb. Megan Cain is our supervising editor
and Beth Donovan is our executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tagel,
Claire Marie Schneider, Margaret Serino and Silby Douglas. Engineering support comes from Zoe Vingenhoven and Gilly Moon.
Fact checking by Ida Porosad.
I'm Ariel Sagara.
Thanks for listening.
Since Donald Trump took office in January, a lot has happened.
The White House Budget Office ordered a pause on all federal grants and loans.
The impact of the Trump administration's tariffs is already being felt.
President Trump's efforts to radically remake the federal government.
The MPR Politics podcast covers it all.
Keep up with what's happening in Washington and beyond with the MPR Politics podcast.
Listen every day.
At Planet Money, we'll take you from a race to make rum in the Caribbean. Our rum, from a quality standpoint, is the best in the world. listen every day.