I said this in an earlier post, but refrigerators don't keep your bread fresh. They in fact make it stale faster.
Bread is a carbohydrate composed primarily of polysaccharides called amylose and amylopectin. What makes bread stale is when the amylose and amylopectin in the bread bond with each other.
At the molecular level they're moving extremely fast, and the speed at which the polysaccharides move is governed by temperature. By chemical kinetics, the higher the temperature, the faster they move, and the lower the temperature, the slower they move.
When amylose and amylopectin are moving more slowly, they have a better chance to bond with each other. When you put bread in a refrigerator, you essentially lower the kinetics of the molecules and effectively increase the probability that amylose and amylopectin will form bonds with each other (hence your bread goes stale).
You can increase the kinetics by putting the bread in the oven, but then you lose moisture to evaporation. So in essence, you can really never get bread back to its original state.
But don't mind me. You guys can keep putting bread in the refrigerator