Friday, May 1, 2026

A Letter From Uganda


I was walking through St. John's Wood a couple of weeks ago when I passed this derelict phone booth with a freaky baby doll's face peering out. I think it's a sticker on the inside of the glass. Bizarre!

Amazingly, all my seedlings -- except for the zinnia I lost to the slug the first night after I planted them out -- seem to be surviving. They're still tiny and not growing much. I think the weather is just too cool. Today is supposed to be beautiful, but rain is forecast for the weekend (please God) and we're getting another chilly spell next week, with highs in the mid-50s F. So they may be sulking for a while.

All but one of the dahlias have sprouted and they're looking good so far, at least.

Rescued plant report: The leaves have fallen off the fiddle-leaf fig and the green sprout has turned brown. It's not looking good. The leaves have also fallen off the tall stalk of the rubber tree, though they're still hanging onto the short branch. I'm thinking the tall stalk may have to come off but the short branch will survive. We shall see.


Here's a weird mystery that came in the mail last week. (The envelope includes our full address, but I've digitally erased it for blog privacy purposes.)

What would you do if you got a letter like this? It's from Uganda, addressed to someone I do not know, but at our correct address. There's no return address, so I couldn't just return it to the sender. I could give it back to the post office but they wouldn't know what to do with it either. It would just go to a dead-letter office, if those even exist anymore.

I decided to try to find the woman to whom it was addressed. I thought she might be a neighbor, so I began by Googling her, as one does. Turns out she was an author and fairly well-known vocal instructor. She even has a Wikipedia page! She was American but she lived in London in the 1980s and '90s, and perhaps she lived in our flat. I have no idea. But she died in California in 2019.

So now I have a letter with no return address, sent to a dead woman. At this point, I decided to open it. Perhaps there would be an address inside that I could respond to, just to let the sender know that their letter didn't reach its intended recipient.

Turns out it's a request for money from a young woman in Uganda who's trying to raise tuition to complete a college degree. I'm not sure why she's writing Ms. Dayme but apparently she does not know her. It's basically a snail-mail equivalent of phishing. If I write her back she's going to put the squeeze on me for money, so I've decided not to respond. It sounds rude but I think that's the way it has to be.

Isn't that strange? Cool stamps, though. I'll save the envelope.

52 comments:

  1. What a beautiful and strange story with the letter from Uganda. It's good that you were careful and didn't reply. And the stamps are indeed beautiful. I have a large collection of stamps that no one is interested in anymore. I wonder what will happen to the stamps in the future.

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    1. I have a stamp collection too. Sadly, it's not something that younger people are very interested in -- and why would they be? Stamps are alien to them!

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  2. They are cool stamps. I agree with cutting the tall stalk of the rubber tree and it seems now too late to take a cutting from the fiddle leaf fig. Can you cut that one down fairly low and see if the centre of the stalk is dead or alive?

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    1. I think I'll just leave it for a while to see if it sprouts from the stalk or the base -- or at all! I didn't really want to deal with cuttings. That's taking the whole "rescued houseplant" thing a bit too far! LOL

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    2. Cutting is the way to encourage new sprouts, it's like growing a hedge, you keep trimming the young plants to encourage "bushing" before allowing them to get taller.

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  3. Scam requests used to come from Nigeria and via email. This is the first time I've heard of one sent through the post though. Great stamps to collect!

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    1. Maybe if this trend develops it will save the Royal Mail?

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  4. A little story in itself. The sender may not have been scamming, after all she took the trouble to write a letter and buy stamps. Best not to reply of course.

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    1. Yeah, she could well be sincere, but I sure don't want to open that door.

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  5. A desperate young Ugandan woman, trying to improve her life and you give her short shrift. Where are your Christian values Steve? A mere £100 would have gone a long way to changing her life for good. Please reconsider your meanness. "People of the world join hands! Start a love train, love train!"

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  6. That is quite an interesting letter. I wonder if the person it was addressed to had a connection to Africa and may have paid for education of some African locals. Or, as you think, perhaps just a outright phishing attempt.

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    1. Yeah, perhaps she offered scholarships or something. Who knows?!

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  7. Good detective work, it might be a genuine appeal or it might not, it's a hard decision to make isn't it. But I think in this case it's wise to do nothing ... but do save those gorgeous stamps.

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    1. Yeah, it may be authentic, but it seems like quite a "Hail Mary" approach given that the writer doesn't even know the woman she's asking for money.

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  8. I am fascinating by that creepy-beautiful phone box image. I like those stamps. The results of your search reinforce the cynic in me.

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    1. My reaction is pretty cynical too. But hey, I'm a journalist!

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  9. I think it wise that you googled the person and that you opened the letter. Primitive Phishing!

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    1. I guess it's sort of like chain letters we used to get, which didn't seek money but asked us to jump through certain hoops so bad luck wouldn't befall us. Remember those?

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  10. That is one weird image in the phone booth.
    And I knew right away that the letter was a request for coins. I guess you can keep getting scammed even after you're dead?

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  11. I usually just open those up to make sure there is nothing important and then toss. Only once can I remember it being something important and in that case, I did track down the intended recipient and explain why I opened their letter and dropped it off.

    I inherited a huge stamp collection from my great uncle with stamps going all the way back into the 19th century. I tried to give it away to a half dozen places and nobody wanted it. I ended up just tossing it in the trash. Such a shame.

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    1. We've lived here long enough now that we seldom get mail addressed to anyone else, and certainly not a hand-written, stamped envelope! I shudder to think what will happen to my stamps after I die.

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  12. Interesting letter. It seems a bit creepy that there was no return address outside. I'd offer the stamps to an artist or crafter!

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  13. I Received One Of Those Lovely Letters - I Sent The Lady A Weeks Worth Of Junk Mail With Our City Building's Return Address - Hope They Enjoyed The Discounted Oil Change

    Party On Brother Man ,
    Cheers

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  14. I don't know why, but I love the baby face in the phone box. Looks like a book cover for a psychological thriller!

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    1. It DOES! It's a very weird and creepy sticker.

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  15. Okay. That is not one I've heard of. Snail mail phishing indeed! What a crazy thing. Maybe whoever is attempting the scam doesn't have a computer?
    Yep. You might have to let that fig go. You have certainly tried but the ungrateful thing just hasn't done its part.
    Haha!
    Try not to feel too bad about it.

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    1. Yeah, all I can do is give my rescued plants the right environment to bounce back. If they choose not to do so, I can't help that!

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  16. Have a nice weekend! Hope you get the rain you need.

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  17. It's sad that the writer did not know the lady author had died or ... that it took this long to get from Uganda to your mailbox! Phishing has made us overly suspicious on all levels!

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    1. I don't think it's been in the mail long. I can't read the postmarks but the letter is dated Feb. 12.

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  18. this letter comes from a pathetic scammer. Maybe not exactly a scammer but a beggar.

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    1. Surely there must be better ways to make money! And how much did she have to spend on postage?

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  19. Love the stamps! I'd save those, too. Talk about analog phishing... first time I've heard of that done in that way. I'm guessing you don't have a neighborhood facebook page or association that you could post this on, but given that it appears to be phishing, why would you even go there? As for the phone booth -- that's just bizarre!

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    1. Yeah, there's no point posting it to the neighborhood page, since the recipient is no longer in the neighborhood. (If she ever was!)

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  20. How very odd. How would someone in Uganda know where someone lived in London that they didn't know and then send a letter asking for money. I'm thinking maybe the letter has been lost in the either. Is there a date on the letter itself? But yeah, cool stamps.

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    1. Yeah, the letter was written Feb. 12, so it hasn't been out there THAT long. Who knows where the writer got this woman's name and address. As someone else said, maybe she used to give scholarships or something, and her address is lingering in some aged file in Africa.

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  21. How strange to get a letter like that. I agree that it does sound like a phishing attempt. I have a very vague memory of something similar happing an my house when I was just a kid long before the internet changed our lives.
    That face in the phone box is very creepy. Great catch photographing it. Have you seen that Bansky statue? I saw lots of photos of it yesterday. I imagine it won't be there long but it makes quite a statement. It could be depicting any one of our current government leaders.

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    1. I haven't seen the Banksy statue yet! I was thinking about going down there, though. Maybe today!

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  22. The letter from Uganda likely results from an old acquaintance. I thought "go fund me" online requests" were the method for fundraising today. Getting a letter is unusual.
    Your seeds are mostly doing just fine and that is great.
    It appears the trees might not revive. Oh well! It is not like you have a shortage of trees, plus you are likely to rescue new trees.

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    1. Yeah, I guess not EVERY rescued houseplant can survive. We've already got plenty!

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  23. I don't think you should feel any guilt at all for tossing the letter. It really has nothing to do with you and the recipient is dead.
    That phone box looks possessed to me! I wouldn't step inside.

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    1. Yeah, I think the sender will just assume that the letter never got to the woman. Maybe she'll do some research and find out about her death. All it would take is a simple Google search!

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  24. They find old addresses and write sympathetic letters, just in case the recipient sends some money. There's probably a group of them doing this and scam or not, it seems like it took a lot of stamps. Our weather is hot right now! We need rain.

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    1. It doesn't seem like a very profitable venture, given the postage costs. Surely very few people send them anything?

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  25. I have never heard of scam/spam via snail mail. Maybe cut the dead off from the fig and see if it will grow from the root.

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    1. If it's going to sprout from the root, it will do so whether or not I cut the stalk down, so for now I'm keeping the stalk to see if it sprouts from there. The fact that the bud died is not a good sign, though.

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  26. Well, the letter was never intended for you, so I do not see any need for you to reply. But it truly is a strange story, and not all that clear whether it is a scam or a genuine request.
    We really need rain here, too, and apparently there is some to come our way next week - probably not on our wedding day.

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