Im lucky in that the couple of estates I do are mostly open plan front gardens so I just deliver the d2d with or without mail and for those that have fences and gates I’ll just leave both d2d’s in the double slots until both have mail.Chelseablue wrote: ↑04 Jan 2026, 16:12How do you just do where u are( with d t ds) going with double slots? If u havent any , thats still to happen or worse
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2026 & beyond
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Walter sobchak
- Posts: 479
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014, 04:46
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
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ted_e_bear
- Posts: 3933
- Joined: 03 Sep 2012, 19:37
- Gender: Male
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Rve83ndxd
- Posts: 217
- Joined: 09 Sep 2023, 10:56
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
I do the rear, my partner the frontyellowbelly wrote: ↑04 Jan 2026, 22:41
Aaah, the secret code, it's like the Freemasons. Everyone has to know the code though!
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pieoftheday
- Posts: 1830
- Joined: 11 Mar 2010, 16:43
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Jason22 wrote: ↑06 Jan 2026, 10:23Thank you for sharing your thoughts so openly. It sounds like you’ve reached an important turning point in prioritizing your health and wellbeing, which is completely understandable given the long time you’ve been in your role and the physical demands of your daily work. Working 26 years in the same job, especially over a decade on the same rural route, is a significant commitment, and it’s natural that you’ve developed a strong sense of responsibility to your customers. That dedication, while admirable, can take a real toll over time, especially when it leads to working beyond your scheduled hours or pushing through physical strain.
Adjusting your approach to focus on a sustainable workload is both reasonable and necessary. By limiting the volume of mail you take out, prioritizing tracked or special items, and adhering to your official finishing time, you are taking steps to protect your health, reduce fatigue, and prevent further injury. These changes will likely improve your long-term performance and overall quality of life, even if it means temporarily changing the expectations of some customers.
It’s also important to acknowledge that setting boundaries is not a reflection of poor work ethic. On the contrary, it shows professionalism and awareness of personal limits. After many years of pushing yourself, making these adjustments is a responsible way to ensure you can continue working effectively while protecting your back and general wellbeing.
If possible, it might help to communicate this new approach with colleagues or supervisors in advance so they understand the changes and can support you where necessary. Over time, your customers will likely understand and respect that prioritizing key items ensures a more consistent and reliable service without risking your health.
Ultimately, protecting your health and maintaining a reasonable work-life balance is critical, and your plan to reorganize your workflow is a positive and sustainable step forward.
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yellowbelly
- Posts: 3626
- Joined: 23 Jun 2015, 15:51
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Well done whatever AI has created this.Jason22 wrote: ↑06 Jan 2026, 10:23Thank you for sharing your thoughts so openly. It sounds like you’ve reached an important turning point in prioritizing your health and wellbeing, which is completely understandable given the long time you’ve been in your role and the physical demands of your daily work. Working 26 years in the same job, especially over a decade on the same rural route, is a significant commitment, and it’s natural that you’ve developed a strong sense of responsibility to your customers. That dedication, while admirable, can take a real toll over time, especially when it leads to working beyond your scheduled hours or pushing through physical strain.
Adjusting your approach to focus on a sustainable workload is both reasonable and necessary. By limiting the volume of mail you take out, prioritizing tracked or special items, and adhering to your official finishing time, you are taking steps to protect your health, reduce fatigue, and prevent further injury. These changes will likely improve your long-term performance and overall quality of life, even if it means temporarily changing the expectations of some customers.
It’s also important to acknowledge that setting boundaries is not a reflection of poor work ethic. On the contrary, it shows professionalism and awareness of personal limits. After many years of pushing yourself, making these adjustments is a responsible way to ensure you can continue working effectively while protecting your back and general wellbeing.
If possible, it might help to communicate this new approach with colleagues or supervisors in advance so they understand the changes and can support you where necessary. Over time, your customers will likely understand and respect that prioritizing key items ensures a more consistent and reliable service without risking your health.
Ultimately, protecting your health and maintaining a reasonable work-life balance is critical, and your plan to reorganize your workflow is a positive and sustainable step forward.
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Tman
- Posts: 4120
- Joined: 21 Oct 2007, 09:57
Re: 2026 & beyond
Presumably the one tied up with "Real American Jackets".
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Mr Rush
- Posts: 3064
- Joined: 05 Aug 2011, 14:27
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
The insincere verbiage is uncanny, but can our AI overlords ever express love like the company has for its employees when it slaps them over and over knowing they'll come back the next day? The answer is no.
The machine stops.
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stevejm
- Posts: 489
- Joined: 09 Dec 2017, 16:16
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Well said. It's the most bizarre thing. I'm surprised that nobody has started a petition to get the 100,000 signatures to get it debated.toonshola wrote: ↑04 Jan 2026, 16:50Or come in after a day off with random ones in double slots left by the float/agency guy and have to guess which address it’s for. In fairness I doubt 99% of the public care if they get another set of junk mail that week anyway. Straight in the recycling bin like our house I would suspect. In a world of climate change and net zero I’m surprised the government hasn’t banned this kind of crap already anyway. Chopping down trees and wrecking the planet so dominoes can send everyone the same leaflets they had 5 weeks prior. Pure madness.ted_e_bear wrote: ↑04 Jan 2026, 16:21Either do them both or write the number on itChelseablue wrote: ↑04 Jan 2026, 16:12How do you just do where u are( with d t ds) going with double slots? If u havent any , thats still to happen or worse
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Walter sobchak
- Posts: 479
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014, 04:46
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Well my return to work this week has seen me be greeted with between 5&6 days worth of mail on my rural duty which has now grown to 7&8 days for 50% of the round currently.
Only be able to tie mail to packets&parcels and maybe a couple of bundles of mail each day.
2nd wagon arriving late and 2/3’s full is killing our office as we are not getting out until around 10am and with a 3pm-3.15pm finish time.
Only be able to tie mail to packets&parcels and maybe a couple of bundles of mail each day.
2nd wagon arriving late and 2/3’s full is killing our office as we are not getting out until around 10am and with a 3pm-3.15pm finish time.
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Walter sobchak
- Posts: 479
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014, 04:46
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
We seem to be having a re-run of Xmas at our office as the packets and parcels still arrive in large numbers mostly thanks to Amazon and the mail volumes has slightly increased too.
Plus having less people on IPS, packets and big parcels to sort it all isn’t helping .
Plus having less people on IPS, packets and big parcels to sort it all isn’t helping .
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Mickeybrowneyes
- Posts: 410
- Joined: 12 Sep 2021, 06:18
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Same here, crazy amount of work.
But unlike Christmas the annual leave spread is open and sick has increased.
You can imagine the carnage.
But unlike Christmas the annual leave spread is open and sick has increased.
You can imagine the carnage.
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SMS1969
- Posts: 977
- Joined: 28 Jun 2021, 11:36
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Yep 2 and 3 quarter hours sorting small packets to walks, put us really behind. Never ceases to amaze me how much sh1t people order, so often the same ones.
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fadetogrey63
- Posts: 289
- Joined: 24 Aug 2024, 07:17
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
Yep, you just know the stay at home ones who have the shien/tiktok/vinted etc crap every single day, and then you get the more annoying ones who order regular but are never at home.. I've noticed a small drop off in the oversize, but my packet bags are still xmas levels, you wonder if this is just the norm now, the time left to deliver mail is getting less and less everyday
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norris9
- Posts: 2621
- Joined: 27 Feb 2019, 17:32
- Gender: Female
Re: 2026 & beyond
I have 4 or 5 customers on my round who have to order something daily. It's like an addiction / some sort of psychological thing where they get to look forward to a new 'gift' for themselves each and everyday. Nobody needs something new every single day - it's gotta be a comfort thing.
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SpacePhoenix
- MAIL CENTRES/PROCESSING
- Posts: 12007
- Joined: 12 Nov 2008, 17:03
- Gender: Male
Re: 2026 & beyond
The local MC will be sending out everything available to go at the wave 1 dispatch time. It must be arriving at the MC later so more missing wave 1.Walter sobchak wrote: ↑07 Jan 2026, 22:142nd wagon arriving late and 2/3’s full is killing our office as we are not getting out until around 10am and with a 3pm-3.15pm finish time.