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Feeling upset by text messages

(61 Posts)
Palmtree Tue 31-Jan-23 06:56:14

I wonder if others ever feel upset by text message replies (or rather the lack of them) from friends and family. I always try to answer any I receive quickly and thoughtfully. However I am not always getting the same treatment in return and wonder if 'its just me' or if others have experienced similar problems. I have been particularly upset recently about 'no reply' when I texted someone I thought of as a friend to tell them about a bereavement in my family. I thought it was very unkind not to receive a reply or card, just nothing. Leaves me a bit in limbo about whether I should even contact that person again. I have also lost contact with others who haven't bothered to keep in touch. I do have some close friends and my husband says I am a very kind person, so may be I am just over thinking this. I just wonder what experiences others have had.

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Millie22 Thu 02-Feb-23 11:49:06

My phone sometimes really annoys me! I've got it on low volume and I'm certainly not one of those people who have it almost glued to their hand. I do always reply to texts though eventually 😂

Really I need a new phone but cba to look as they are all so big.

Deedaa Thu 02-Feb-23 11:43:29

With bereavements I always telephone any close friends or relatives. For anyone else I either post the details on Facebook or add a note to their next Christmas or birthday card.

hilz Thu 02-Feb-23 11:40:04

Not a fan of text being used to have a conversation. If I feel I need immediate reply then I would simply phone or face time and have a conversation. So much of a text can be mis interpreted. Some days I don't check my phone very often, working on the theory that if someone needs a reply from me quickly and hasn't had a reply to their message then they will call me.

Chardy Thu 02-Feb-23 11:36:19

I agree that lack of reply is rude, but there's a lot of it about.

tickingbird Thu 02-Feb-23 11:31:55

I get upset and irked when others don’t respond to texts and WhatsApp’s. I find it very rude and bad mannered and I’m a stickler for good manners. People can’t be expected to respond immediately but not to respond to a text informing someone of a bereavement is extremely poor. Unless there’s a good reason I wouldn’t bother with them again.

Ps sorry for your loss flowers

icanhandthemback Thu 02-Feb-23 11:21:05

Sometimes somebody other than me reads my text before I get to it if I am busy so I don't notice I have had a new one. I'd never leave anybody hanging deliberately but sometimes life gets in the way and my memory is winding down!

AreWeThereYet Tue 31-Jan-23 12:31:12

Yes I am odd but why do we need to be in constant communication?

I'm odd, too, but I'm not going to apologise for it 😄

Palmtree Why not give your friend a ring now, she may have a reason for not texting back (although you may not agree with her reason). But at least it will get you out of limbo.

I often forget my phone when I go out. When I'm home it is usually upstairs, sometimes in my handbag, and I rarely bother with it. I'm not particularly chatty anyway, and don't feel the need to always be in contact with people - if MrA wasn't here I probably wouldn't talk to anyone for days 😄 So I may or may not answer a text quickly. My friends and family know to contact MrA if anything is urgent and that's very rare.

Hithere Tue 31-Jan-23 12:29:39

The cell is a personal tool for communication, for our personal convenience

This is another point of generational conflict - different communication methods and etiquette

1987H2001M2002Inanny Tue 31-Jan-23 12:21:51

I meant use !!

1987H2001M2002Inanny Tue 31-Jan-23 12:21:15

Palmtree A well known saying comes to mind...theres nowt so queer as folk. I guess don't bother with non response ones and fuse that time to do something enjoyable.

LRavenscroft Tue 31-Jan-23 12:14:52

biglouis

As I have 3 computers all with "proper" keyboards I find texting a pretty silly and tedious way to communicate at the best of times and have never got into it. I have people whom I know are not really into online communications and when I email them I dont really expect a reply although I know they got the information.

Maybe Im so used to communicating with Americans and getting one word replies because thats the way they do things. Not meaning to be curt, just businesslike.

Interesting what you say about Americans and one word replies. I was chatting to a German lady once who worked in London and she said the hardest thing she found with working in a British office was all the polite phrases attached to emails i.e. Thank you for your email. I hope you are well and ends with Look forward to hearing from you soon. Apparently, in Germany they just get to the point.

MarathonRunner Tue 31-Jan-23 11:44:38

My husband found out from a Facebook post that his cousin in law had died suddenly. Having seen him only a few months before he was mortified to find out like that especially since immediate family had his contact details . It's a funny old world sometimes . Needless to say he was in touch with the family immediately.

biglouis Tue 31-Jan-23 11:20:46

I am very guilty of not answering text messages for the simple reason I cannot be bothered to look at my phone, I only do so a couple of times a day, often forget where it is or to charge it.

Yes this is me! I hate smart-phones and mine is smart enough to stay out of the way! I check it about once a week and life still goes on.

biglouis Tue 31-Jan-23 11:17:59

As I have 3 computers all with "proper" keyboards I find texting a pretty silly and tedious way to communicate at the best of times and have never got into it. I have people whom I know are not really into online communications and when I email them I dont really expect a reply although I know they got the information.

Maybe Im so used to communicating with Americans and getting one word replies because thats the way they do things. Not meaning to be curt, just businesslike.

ParlorGames Tue 31-Jan-23 11:15:06

Before all these gadgets and apps we relied on traditional landline telephones, letters, or simply word of mouth to pass on news like a bereavement or birth of a new baby etc.
Did we fret about not seeing that good friend from school for so long? Probably not. Did we greet them enthusiastically if we bumped into them in town saying how lovely it was to see them? Probably so.
I think SM, texting, messaging, WhatsApp,and whatever else we all use has turned some us a tad over sensitive when we don't get a response from someone. It isn't always possible to know is a message has been opened and quite often they just don't get delivered either.
Palmtree, I am sorry for you loss but do put aside your feelings regarding the non-response to your announcement - focus on yourself and those around you, they are the ones that matter.

Gin Tue 31-Jan-23 11:11:09

Perhaps your friend, like me, is not a ‘phone person’. I am very guilty of not answering text messages for the simple reason I cannot be bothered to look at my phone, I only do so a couple of times a day, often forget where it is or to charge it. Yes I am odd but why do we need to be in constant communication? I find it strange that my son and his partner will message each other with something as trivial as asking each other if they want a coffee! What is wrong with yelling upstairs in my fashion?
If I had been told of a bereavement by text, I do not think I would have wanted to reply in that way as I would want a more personal response than what to me would seem a cold short message. Text messages are too instant for such an ocasion.

I often wonder what my father would make of life today. He always answered the phone with ‘what do you want?’ because phones were for urgent communications not for chatting.

Theexwife Tue 31-Jan-23 11:03:08

Maybe your friend was going to reply with a phone call later and never got around to it, then felt she had left it too long to reply. I am only saying that as I have done the same.

Some texts I reply to fairly quickly if circumstances allow, but for the long ones which I know will be a text conversation I leave until I have time and am not in company.

If I have sent texts with no reply I would assume that the person does not wish to have contact with me and that's fine, I would not force myself on somebody.

Callistemon21 Tue 31-Jan-23 10:42:58

As others have said, text is an unusual medium by which to send news of a death. Maybe the person didn’t realise how close the deceased was to you?

I agree with this.

Sending news of a bereavement by text does seem rather casual. Perhaps a phone call would be more personal and they may have responded with a condolence card.
Perhaps the person hasn't even looked at the text yet? I recently found a message from someone from a week or so ago. It wasn't that important thank goodness.

We tend to use WhatsApp with friends and family, texts seem to be for appointments and business.

I am sorry for your loss flowers

Redhead56 Tue 31-Jan-23 10:32:15

You are sensitive at the moment for good reason so I wouldn’t take it to heart 💐. Everyone deals with a bereavement differently some find it hard to respond others easily find words of comfort.
However regarding text in general we communicate mostly by WhatsApp for family and friends. It’s convenient if you are busy you can respond when you feel like. If my family are working I know they will respond later when they can.
Some acquaintances have not replied to texts I have sent and my best wishes text at Christmas so that simply means I won’t bother again.
Some people are soo! busy they just send an emoji I think it’s rude if it’s someone supposedly close.

Palmtree Tue 31-Jan-23 10:25:38

Thank you so much for your messages of condolence (for a much loved family member but not immediate family) and also your valuable insights in how others deal with text messages. I hadn't really realised how differently we all think of and deal with all the various types of messages we receive .I now realise I am probably overthinking at the moment and have too much time on my hands which is making me feel upset unnecessarily. I am a bit old school and always send a card and usually a letter too if anyone I am acquainted with suffers a family bereavement, but just even telling someone of a bereavement by text shows how much times have changed I guess. I'm sure this friend has a lot going on in her life too and may not have realised how sad I was feeling at the time. Thank you everyone for your replies

pascal30 Tue 31-Jan-23 10:00:50

also remember that txt's don't always get through. Better to check first before assuming that your friend is ignoring you..

crazyH Tue 31-Jan-23 09:55:16

Texting is our family’s main mode of communication. We have a family WhatsApp group and all news, titbits etc are via the app. It’s more convenient. Although I have plenty of time on my hands, the rest are busy with work / young families and I don’t like to intrude.

Dickens Tue 31-Jan-23 09:46:35

We have text messages, voicemail, Whatsapp, Messenger, and PM systems on various SM platforms. Not to mention 'phone calls on both mobiles and landline (I still have mine).

... all demanding our attention during various points in the day. It's too much IMO - an overload.

I have told all my friends and family that - unless it's an urgent matter - I will respond when I have the time and they understand.

Sometimes, it's also having the inclination. I think we've all had messages and mails that are 'chatty' in nature where the things that are said would be acknowledged with a nod or a smile in physical conversation, but for which we have to find suitable words to 'appreciate' in a message. For me, late night is when I have the time to focus on such messages, and I'm often too fatigued for it. In reply to long messages which have outlined the minutiae of a friend's day (or week!)... I simply want to message back, "nice to hear from you" but feel compelled to reply to each bit of 'chat'. And that is often tedious.

allule Tue 31-Jan-23 09:36:58

One thing I like about texting, rather than phoning, is that you have time to think before replying, and perhaps look something up. So often after a phone call I think of something else I meant to say, but forgot.
You also know they can reply when convenient, rather than getting called away from a meal etc

Doodledog Tue 31-Jan-23 08:34:17

I find people who jump on every text to be very rude. If I am in company I ignore texts until I am alone, or at least until there is a break in the conversation. I often have my phone on silent too - eg if I am out for dinner or in the cinema/theatre, and I sometimes forget to turn it back on.

As others have said, text is an unusual medium by which to send news of a death. Maybe the person didn’t realise how close the deceased was to you?

Having said that, ‘leaving on read’ is also rude. Texting has a whole new set of rules of etiquette, and people don’t always abide by the same ones. My husband (and son for that matter) often don’t reply, so I’m never sure if they have registered the message. I now phrase texts to them as questions so they tend to reply. So ‘are you able to get some bread on your way home?’ rather than ‘please get some bread’ is more likely to get a response.