I have mentioned before that I have a sort of personal campaign going on to keep cash in use. The Italian greengrocery where I shop regularly (at present they have excellent oranges, by the way) put up a notice recently about how much they had paid in the last six months in charges for accepting payment by card. Now I think that they only accept card payments for amounts over £5, which still strikes me as a very small amount, all things considered. Yet I see people pay by card, and increasingly not by card but using an app on their mobile phone, for trivial stuff like small packets of chewing gum or bars of chocolate.
How are children to learnt the value of money if they never see their parents using it but purchasing stuff with a magic card? Here’s a link to an article by someone called Sammy Gecsoyler who set himself the challenge of living cardless for a week. He gave himself £200 for his everyday expenses: travel to work, stocking up with food, buying lunch, socialising and so on.
He told us that, “According to a report by the trade association UK Finance, cash was used for 9% of all transactions in 2024: the first time this figure has dipped below 10%. In comparison, 34% of all cash payments were made in cash in 2017. A study last year by the cash machine network Link found that fewer than half of people in the UK now carry a physical wallet.”
So the first thing he had to do was buy something to carry his cash in - a transparent pencil case as it happens. He also had to buy an Oyster Card and charge it with cash as it seems buses in London haven’t accepted cash since 2014. As long ago as that!? I am astounded.
He also discovered the inconvenience of his favourite coffee places only accepting card payments. Similarly he couldn’t rent a Lime bike because that can only be done by card.
He did find himself less likely to impulse buy if payment for those sudden purchases were coming from a supply of actual money - notes and coins - rather than by seeming magic!
At the end of the week he planned to resurrect his cards but will still use cash for some things.
Maybe it’s harder to live without cards if you don”t live and work in central London. I shall continue my campaign to pay cash, to use manned checkouts at the supermarket, to talk to fellow passengers on the bus, and to say thank you and wish the driver a good day!
Now for some Words:
fun is a noun. Something can be ‘good fun’ but lately it has become an adjective and now things can be ‘very fun’.
cringe is a verb. Things can make you cringe or you can cringe when you think of certain things you may have done. Now, according to fashion writer Jess Carter Morley, cringe is an adjective and your clothes can be cringe.
It seems that “Being cringe is essentially being old-fashioned, but worse. Being old-fashioned is what happens when you grow older with grace and dignity. Cringe is when you lose your touch while convincing yourself you are still down with the kids.”
I shall try hard not be “cringe” and more correctly not to make people cringe by criticising their use of language.
That’s it for today. I am posting late because I went out trying to return an unwanted Christmas present (one I bought for someone who then turned out to be allergic to it. This was a fruitless task. For various reasons I had allowed the time period for returning good to elapse and I now have to find another use, or another recipient, for said gift!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!







