In a world obsessed with digital everything, why do we still get paper receipts shoved in our hands? They’re often long, wasteful, and nobody really reads them. Most of us just toss them in the trash or stuff them in our bags only to lose them later.
Is it habit? Legal protection? Or maybe it’s a weird comfort—a physical proof of purchase that feels more “real” than a digital blip?
And what about the environmental cost? Thousands of trees, gallons of water, and pounds of ink for a few centimeters of paper that last maybe a day.
This tiny everyday thing feels like a metaphor for all the outdated rituals we cling to, even when smarter, cleaner options exist. Progress isn’t always about invention — sometimes it’s about letting go.
