5/31/2025

Random Saturday - It's a small world ...

We all have our stories, I'm sure.
Meeting someone in a foreign country and they are from your hometown.
Meeting someone and learning you are somehow related.
Meeting someone away from home and finding out you have the same friends.
Stories like that.

Just recently, my sister and I added a new one to our repertoire.

Of course, our town has changed quite a bit since we were kids and keeps changing. Old houses get torn down, new ones built, there's construction, shops close down, new ones open up, a shop building gets transformed into flats, etc.
Sometimes I will walk somewhere and try to remember what a shop was called that used to be here or what the building looked like that used to be where there's a big hole all of a sudden.
Even as a child I have been a fan of old photos, and in these moments I think it's a pity we don't have more photos from around town.
There have always been people taking pictures, though, and there have been postcards, and some of these turn up on social media, on websites selling postcards for collectors, and on eBay.

Every, now and then we go through them and in very rare cases, we even get one - like the one I'm going to tell you about now.

My sister called to say I should have a look at that one postcard of our "Stadthalle" (which literally translates to "town hall", but your "town hall/city hall" is called "Rathaus" here, it's a place for plays, concerts, talks, antique fairs, balls, which can also be rented for big weddings) and its park.
As kids we were in the park a lot because we lived almost next to it, playing, reading, looking for tadpoles.
It was interesting to see how small the trees to the right still were back then, how different the paths looked, the flowers around the little springs were missing, the building still had the clock and the old logo ...


The seller also had a picture of the back. I edited private information out even though the card is from 1976.


In translation, the text reads:
"Dear Mrs. ...!
Thank you very much for your kind Christmas and New Year wishes which I warmly return. I live right next to the
Stadthalle xx now. It's really nice! How are you? Are you all well? Kind regards! ..."

I read out the signature to my sister and still wondered why that name sounded so familiar to me when she said "What??".
The name had been familiar because she had had a neighbor with the same name ... living next to the Stadthalle ... in the same house as her ...
That's when I noticed. The card had been written in red, but there were those two black x next to the word Stadthalle, and there was a black x on the vertical line with the postcard printer's name and what we both had missed before, there was ... no kidding ... my sister's address!
Her neighbor had sent this card!

That means the postcard went to Austria in January 1976 and almost 50 years later it came back to Göppingen via a postcard dealer in Berlin, back to the same house where it was probably written ... in the flat where another family member of mine is living now!
I have to admit I got goosebumps a little and yes, of course we bought it.
Seriously now, what are the odds?

Do you have a story about the "small world"?
If so, I'd love to hear it!

P.S. See the number I circled in? Our zip code, you would think ... wrong, it's a typo, our zip code was 732 then!

10 comments:

  1. Wow! That is incredible! And so very cool.

    I do have a small world story. In 2002 my parents and I moved to Las Vegas. My mom was still teaching elementary school. As a teacher new to Las Vegas she had to go to teacher orientation. She began chatting with a younger teacher, and as the conversation went on they realized that my mom had been the younger teacher’s 3rd grade teacher in California.

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    1. Right! I think that's the best "small world" story I had in a while! If the back hadn't been scanned - some postcard dealers don't do it - we wouldn't even have known.
      Your mom's story is a good one, too. That must have been so exciting for them!

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  2. This has to be the absolute coolest post I've ever read! It's such a nifty postcard, but to discover it was addressed to your sister is mind-blowing! How did it come to be on a selling site? It really is a small world!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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    1. Oh, it wasn't addressed to my sister who was only 14 at the time, but they became neighbors in the same house some years after that, and now another family member lives in the flat the sending lady lived in (both houses used to belong to family friends).
      It doesn't make it less amazing, though. Those postcard sellers have hundreds of thousands of cards, who knows where they got all of them, estate liquidations, old archives maybe, fairs, and fleamarkets. It would be really interesting to know from where to where that card went before it came "home"!
      It is as if it waited for us to find it!

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  3. That's so cool! We have what we call One Degree of South Birmingham here - even though our city has well over a million people, if you meet someone from the South-West segment of it you will have a friend in common. Recently I've joined the steering committee to save our Community Centre and do a community takeover and on the committee with me are a friend I met through BookCrossing 18 years ago, the husband of a running friend, and the husband of a woman who used to wait tables at a favourite cafe, where we met her just as she was pregnant - kid is now 14. So we weave together like that. But the best one? When we first moved to Birmingham, a guy came to our BookCrossing meetup who lived in Birmingham now. But grew up in North Harrow, where my husband grew up. And was taught piano by ... my husband's mother!

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    1. That's amazing, thank you for sharing! That must have been a surprise to hear!
      I told my neighbor about the card because we talked about the small world of our town and we both came up with some good stories.

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  4. That is so neat! We had a fun little experience like that last summer when we went to the Republic of Georgia. We were waiting on our plane connection in Amsterdam , and lo and behold, we look up and friends we hadn't seen in years were on the same plane to Georgia for that leg of the trip. The odds of them traveling the same day, departing from different airports... It was so fun to see them!
    www.chezmireillefashiontravelmom.com

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    1. What a good story! It must have been quite the surprise for all of you, especially if it has been years!

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  5. That is a crazy story!!! Wow! It really is a small world. I enjoy stories like that. A local artist was on a trip to Italy for an art study one time and said he had a layover -- where, I can't remember, but somewhere in Europe. He started talking to the man next to him and one thing led to another and it turned out they were from the same tiny town in Pennsylvania. The younger man was a soldier on his way home on leave and they knew the same families. Talk about a small world!

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    1. I wonder if someone has already collected stories like those in a book or something. That would be so fun to read! That reminds me how I was stranded at San Francisco airport once because the car of my friend's mother broke down. A guy in a booth started talking to me about donations or something and we found that as a soldier he had been stationed in that part of our state capital where I had lived for a few years!
      Thank you for sharing!

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