Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Turn off notifications. Every other day or so give her a thumbs up on a couple of the texts.
My parents have a group text with us, my brother and SIL, and adult nieces. I just kind of figure out when it's important to turn on the notifications (like when planning a family gathering). Otherwise, I glance at it every day to make sure nobody is in the hospital, and only respond to the interesting things.
My mom once did say something about how nobody responds to her. My lovely nieces pitched in and now give her likes and mini responses lol.
Yay for a new generation of young women learning to meet the unreasonable emotional manipulation of older relatives?
Can you please identify the “unreasonable emotional manipulation” you are referring to?
“Nobody responds to me wah wah wah…”
Anonymous wrote:OP, I get that receiving a constant stream of texts is very annoying.
As other posters have suggested, turn off notifications and/or only reply if and when you wish to reply.
BUT ... please do not underestimate loneliness in middle aged and elderly people. Loneliness can be destructive. It eats at one's self-esteem and it can lead to depression.
Getting out there and making friends is easier said than done. Easy when you're a kid, not so easy when you're past 50.
I'm in my 50s and it feels like everyone already has their friendship circles set up. Not having kids can be a barrier too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Turn off notifications. Every other day or so give her a thumbs up on a couple of the texts.
My parents have a group text with us, my brother and SIL, and adult nieces. I just kind of figure out when it's important to turn on the notifications (like when planning a family gathering). Otherwise, I glance at it every day to make sure nobody is in the hospital, and only respond to the interesting things.
My mom once did say something about how nobody responds to her. My lovely nieces pitched in and now give her likes and mini responses lol.
Yay for a new generation of young women learning to meet the unreasonable emotional manipulation of older relatives?
Can you please identify the “unreasonable emotional manipulation” you are referring to?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s annoying but they are probably lonely. Through them a bone a respond at least once or twice a day
Oh goodness no unless you want to reinforce it. If you don't like, don't respond. If the person asks, you say you have no time. Lonely people need to get out there and make friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Turn off notifications. Every other day or so give her a thumbs up on a couple of the texts.
My parents have a group text with us, my brother and SIL, and adult nieces. I just kind of figure out when it's important to turn on the notifications (like when planning a family gathering). Otherwise, I glance at it every day to make sure nobody is in the hospital, and only respond to the interesting things.
My mom once did say something about how nobody responds to her. My lovely nieces pitched in and now give her likes and mini responses lol.
Yay for a new generation of young women learning to meet the unreasonable emotional manipulation of older relatives?
Anonymous wrote:Turn off notifications. Every other day or so give her a thumbs up on a couple of the texts.
My parents have a group text with us, my brother and SIL, and adult nieces. I just kind of figure out when it's important to turn on the notifications (like when planning a family gathering). Otherwise, I glance at it every day to make sure nobody is in the hospital, and only respond to the interesting things.
My mom once did say something about how nobody responds to her. My lovely nieces pitched in and now give her likes and mini responses lol.
Anonymous wrote:Turn off notifications, reply when you want, and dismiss the passive-aggressive comments in person because it's your choice to reply however often you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I do, a simple cost/benefit analysis: How much does it matter to them and how much does it cost me?
Factors that go into this equation are how much I care about this person, what their life circumstances may be, what my life circumstances are, etc.
But bottom line, if me taking 45 seconds to send one text a day makes someone I care about happier or less lonely, I'm likely going to chose to send the text.
The cost of sending that text is you reinforce it and open the door to a barrage of texts. The cost is you let the frustration build until you want to explode instead of simply nipping it in the bud so you can still be polite to the person.The cost is that the mad texter does find more effective ways to connect with the world like going out and making real friends. The cost is you are enabling inappropriate behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Here is what I do, a simple cost/benefit analysis: How much does it matter to them and how much does it cost me?
Factors that go into this equation are how much I care about this person, what their life circumstances may be, what my life circumstances are, etc.
But bottom line, if me taking 45 seconds to send one text a day makes someone I care about happier or less lonely, I'm likely going to chose to send the text.