forevertotxt wrote: » I've been seeing a guy a few months and things are going pretty well. He seems to really like me, we spend a lot of time together, and he's said he can see me being his girlfriend. The thing is, he takes hours at a time to reply to my txts. I mean if he was at work ok, but he'll just be at home and take 1 to 2 hours to respond to me. It makes me feel unimportant or like he's up to something else or talking to someone else. I spoke to him about it today on the phone (in the least needy way possible, I made it sort of casual like "hey, why do you take so long to txt back?!" and he told me he really doesn't mean to do it, he really likes me, etc.. He said one of the nights he just fell asleep. But tonight he's doing it again. Am I totally over-reacting with this or am I right to be concerned?
bitofabind wrote: » If a guy hadn’t committed to a relationship with me after a few moths of dating and that was combined with a lack of regular contact, I’d be reading the signs and moving on tbh. .
Wanderer78 wrote: » Jesus modern tech really is a disaster in these circumstances, it can take me hours, sometimes days to respond to people, and a lot of the time, I'm just uncontactable, phones really are a pain in the hole, mine spends most of its life on silent. Op, just go with the flow, don't over think and enjoy it
Ursus Horribilis wrote: That's not a good attitude to have either. You must irritate the life out of people who genuinely need to contact you about something important. We had a family emergency a few years ago and the person who most needed to be kept in the loop wasn't seen for 3 days because they'd stuck their phone in a bag on silent and couldn't be bothered checking it.
Wanderer78 wrote: » I generally find, problems with my phone, tend to be other people's problems with my phone, I'm contactable during emergencies. this whole contactabilty thing is a relatively new phenomenon, and it isn't good for our mental wellbeing, I do check my phone throughout the day, I'm just not very contactable. I've found people's tolerance is continually falling with modern tech, every question must be answered immediately, in fact, by the time the question appears in their minds, it's actually too late. This behaviour is unhealthy for us, most phone communications are not very important
leggo wrote: » People have been dying literally since there has been people, it’s not a new phenomenon to need to contact people in emergencies. This is getting off-topic anyway. For me I have friends who are similar to the poster above and it’s difficult to maintain the friendship, because I might be able to see them 3-4 times a year (with effort) and being able to have a somewhat coherent conversation in other ways could help that. I just couldn’t be with someone who was like that. For me it screams avoidant who’s clamouring for their personal freedom and fears any kind of intimacy, which is the backbone of any solid relationship. So OP’s thoughts are valid and maybe we should address them as they are instead of trying to force our own values on them.
bitofabind wrote: » I hate relationship advice that basically says "your needs are wrong. Stop being unreasonable and ignore them. Instead, do this totally game-playing thing to test your partner and see how he responds". Your needs are your needs. I don't think expecting to communicate regularly by text every day with someone you've been dating for a few months is demanding or needy. If there's a lack of that and it's from a non-committal guy that is still hmming and hawing about you after several months, I'm not surprised it's triggering anxiety in you. My suggestion would be to communicate like an adult with him and see if he responds compassionately. "Hey Joe. I know I've mentioned this before. But I feel a bit out of sorts when I text you regularly and don't hear back for hours on end. Can we agree on something a bit more solid, maybe a phone call after work every day?" If his response is "no and stop being needy", then you're simply not compatible and this relationship has no legs and you can move on.
Beechwoodspark wrote: » One option is go radio silence and see how long he takes to contact you. Another option is to be completely clear and tell him u find his reply delays totally unacceptable, rude, etc. see if he falls into line.
Porklife wrote: » I usually think you give excellent advice Bitofabind but I strongly disagree with asking for a phonecall after work everyday. If a guy asked me to call him every day after work, I'd honestly be freaked out and would walk away. Nobody has the right to encroach on your time like that. Also, the OP would never know if the guy is calling her because he genuinely wants to talk to her or if he's calling her to keep within her demands. Often after work people are tired or they may have plans with friends or want to go to the gym or just not feel like talking to their partner or to anyone on the phone. I personally hate talking on the phone and would hate if my boyfriend called me after work.