I’m not much of a TV watcher. When I’m in a bit of a masochistic mood, I’ll turn on the Phillies game or the Eagles and watch them lose. But most evenings, after dinner and an hour or two with my wife, I go to my reading room and read novels and history and politics – or just surf the web and see how one article leads to another. Hours can be spent this way, pleasurable hours learning fascinating things. If I hadn’t spent all day working on stamps, I’d probably add philately to my nightly interests.
Considering the competition that we have – the fact that virtually every movie, TV show, periodical, book, or sales catalog that has ever been made is available for our instant use, the wonder isn’t that philately has lost some popularity, it’s that its retained so much interest after all. There is something special about our solitude with our stamps, the thrill of acquiring a needed item at an attractive price that has kept, and will keep, stamp collecting an active and important part of many people’s life.