I'm not sure how that works in the U.S., but with a mail address I could send her a registered parcel in the mail, perhaps a cat statue or a head scarf. If the parcel comes back with "addressee diseased" I got them. This is a rough outline of the plan, not tongue in cheek.
Around here (in the "Switzerland of the Balkans") I can send personal letters only the actual addressee can receive, but perhaps that is reserved for IRS or similar government offices. (Expected a letter from the IRS, with bad news. Went to the post office, ripped it open, found out I owed more than a million bucks. Turned out, the actual addressee had a similar name. That was a very exciting minute if you can believe that.)
Thanks for the word, fren. I looked it up on the all-knowing dumpster, but alas:
Certified mail is only available for Priority Mail and First Class Mail[16] letters mailed within the United States and its territories (including APOs and FPOs)
Otherwise, that would be the ticket and I learned a new term (:
I'm not sure how that works in the U.S., but with a mail address I could send her a registered parcel in the mail, perhaps a cat statue or a head scarf. If the parcel comes back with "addressee diseased" I got them. This is a rough outline of the plan, not tongue in cheek.
around here the courier doesn't care if someone with the same last name picks up the package and signs for a family member
Around here (in the "Switzerland of the Balkans") I can send personal letters only the actual addressee can receive, but perhaps that is reserved for IRS or similar government offices. (Expected a letter from the IRS, with bad news. Went to the post office, ripped it open, found out I owed more than a million bucks. Turned out, the actual addressee had a similar name. That was a very exciting minute if you can believe that.)
Send Certified Mail? (addressee has to sign)
Thanks for the word, fren. I looked it up on the all-knowing dumpster, but alas:
Otherwise, that would be the ticket and I learned a new term (: