DP here and you are much more likely to get a response from me if you text. My email is overwhelmed with crap. So this is not universal. |
If you ask a direct question you are absolutely owed a respond. Unless you’re a heathen with no manners. |
The entitled generation has entered the chat. …to tell you that you are NOT entitled to expect good manners and civility. |
+1. Ugly faces have replaced words, in some cases (for those extremely asocial). |
+1 Yes or no is an answer, if you are not inclined to use full sentences, like an adult. Also, if someone invites you to something, be polite about it, one way or the other. If someone asks you an innocuous question, act like you have parents. |
| I am very responsive, clear, prompt and polite with the vast majority of people in my life. If I am evasive or don’t engage, it is because the person contacting me is notoriously obnoxious and doesn’t respect “no,” doesn’t respect anything other than what they want/what they want to hear, and is generally unable to take no for an answer or read social cues. |
| If it’s a group text asking about attending something, people usually just don’t respond if they’re not interested. That doesn’t offend me much. If you ask one person a direct question, it’s polite to respond either way. |
Yeah, I was just going to write this. In OP's examples, the third one doesn't require a response. It's a group email asking if people wanted to join her. |
I understand that some people do this, and I as well, but there are some people just itching, and they tend to be adversarial, no matter how simple or inoffensive the question. It takes the form of wanting the person who asked the question to look like the bad guy - a deflection/projection, from asocial respondents. They respondent is difficult, and lacks communication skills, so they scapegoat the person who is asking a simple and inoffensive question. If you pay more attention, you can see it in certain (usually predictable) situations. After a while, it becomes a game of Bingo. |
It would offend me if it is a small group (ten or less), or something that requires a reservation - otherwise, no offense. |
This. If this is all by text, well, people get a lot of texts, and they get buried quickly. I generally take silence as a no, or at least don't stress about it. If possible, include a deadline and make the default answer no. If I genuinely need an answer, I follow up. |
I actually agree with this. You know the person asking the question is internally asking the difficult person "who hurt you?! take a proper socialization class!" Some people need to get over themselves - they lack power, so they think they are punishing the other person by not answering their question. In reality, they are only punishing themselves by missing out. |
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Social niceties are the way people build and preserve relationships. When people are silent and never respond, I take that as a sign that this person doesn’t want a relationship, and move on.
The best thing about this is that you can focus your energy on the people that *do* respond. They are the ones who want a relationship with you. |
+1 for sure |
Maybe you have bad breath |