That's your problem! Get an iPhone! |
My parents always do this! I’ve subconsciously started sending big blocks of text to cut down on this. |
Do all android phones do this??? That seems really backwards — or is your phone just really old? |
Yeah, your sister sounds like an awful human. Just horrific, I’m so sorry you have to deal with that. |
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If you don't like reactions like heart/thumbs up to your texts, YOU ARE SENDING TOO MANY TEXTS about dumb, unimportant stuff.
Ask yourself why you are sending someone a picture of banana bread that you made. And then ask yourself, what could they possibly say to that beyond a thumbs up? What do you want from them? Texting is not Instagram. Repeat that mantra to yourself until you can break YOUR annoying habit. |
I genuinely don't understand why my friend from college feels the need to send me these types of updates daily. Do you heavy-texters ever just...live life? |
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Everyone I know just uses the "like" as an acknowledgment of seeing the text.
As in: Friend: "I'll pick your son up at 10am". Me" "like". |
The point is that Android users don't see the hearts and thumbs. They get the message repeated back to them. |
+1 Same. |
This is a valid use of the like option. But I have a friend or 2 in a group chat who constantly likes individual messages. What’s worse is that it influences other people to do this. Agree that it can be an attention seeking thing, unlike acknowledging a text from a friend who has taken your kid with their kid to the park that states: Hey! We are leaving the park. |
Do you have an iPhone? That's not the case on my Samsung. |
What!!! She acknowledges everything with "likes"? Wow, what an awful awful miserable waste of a human being. Poor you for having such an awful sister. |
I do have an iphone, but I am in group texts with people who don't. This happens to the iphone people too. |
Same. Or my brother sends me a pic of his new baby - who I have not yet gotten to meet, thanks to COVID - and I "love" it because that seems like the appropriate response. He knows I saw the pic, he knows I am having a positive reaction, what else am I supposed to say? And to the PP: People are sending you pics of their food because they miss you and want to connect in a low key normal life sort of way. People being busy and living far apart made that hard to do before COVID. Now it's basically impossible. So we share small parts of our lives with other people so we feel connected, still. I'm sure if you told your college friend you don't like, love, or give two f*cks about her banana bread, she'd stop sending them. Or just don't respond - don't like or love the pics, don't ask a question - and she'll get the hint you are too important and busy for her little life. |
Not in my Samsung or my pixel. |