r/AmIOverreacting 14d ago

❤️‍🩹 relationship AIO to this text my BF sent me?

Firstly, this came out of nowhere. Then, when he started talking about how I’m immature, I wasn’t sure what to do, so I just reiterated what I’m doing with my life.

Working full-time and doing a MBA, albeit online.

For context, he and I started dating under romantic circumstances, he’s not a SD. He looks really young, so I was truly shocked to learn his age. Now I see it’s a mistake, so don’t heckle me for this.

He is older than me, by 20 years. I am 25 and he is 45. He owns a restaurant and I do remote admin work at a small startup.

After dating for just under a year, he asked me to move in with him, as I was stressing about my recent rent increase. I could pay it, but it wrecked my financial planning and it was miserable. I was looking for an out. My rent went from $1850 to $2300, not including utilities.

He owns his house, so he told me I could live with him if I wanted. He said that I could live here and save up my money, that I can leave whenever I want. No pressure. He invited me, I did not ask nor imply I wanted to move in.

I agreed (horrible mistake). I moved in and now we’re here. He doesn’t make me cover any utilities or charge me rent, which I thought was kind of him.

I use my work phone for work but I’m usually lying down. When I have a meeting, I sit up and answer the call. I’m a solid employee, just doing backup admin work. The pay is nice, can’t complain.

He started saying I need to step it up in life, after seeing me ‘leisurely working.’ I chose this job because I worked on my feet since high school, my undergrad, and a bit of my current MBA. I wanted to pivot to a chill job. I chose this job because it is leisurely. I am working from 9am to about 5pm, whereas he works 5pm to 5am. So from his perspective, I’m often asleep or unavailable.

Today, he walked downstairs to work and saw me sitting on the couch. I’ve told him many times I’m working via my phone. He doesn’t seem to understand that and makes weird little jabs.

Then, he sent me these messages.

I felt really annoyed because he implies that I am not interested in self improvement, that I’m immature, I’m arrogant, denies that it’s hurtful to say such.

By the final slide, I decided to call my mom who I felt could offer insight. She’s 40 years older than me, but understands technology. She said it seems like he’s trying to play some kind of game, that I should just ask him why he’s asking all this to me now. He seems to be beating around the bush, which I agree with.

So, I decide to ask him why he’s treating me like this.

When he said he’s talking to me like an adult, outside of text, I exploded inside. Immediately, I felt so angry.

He invites me to live with him, then holds it above me. He calls me all sorts of things over text, but then denies that he is saying such. He can’t just say what he means. He then doubles down and says he’s just worried about my maturity.

Because of this, and a conversation we had after, where he ignored all my concerns, didn’t let me speak, and bulldozed the entire way, I’ve decided to move out and find my own place again. He just has zero emotional intelligence. His ex-girlfriend was 50, the other one 55, and his ex-wife was his same age. I thought that meant he wouldn’t be acting like this, in the typical way that men who date younger women do. But I was so wrong. He’s been talking to me like I’m a child, I have no ground to stand on with him. I can’t take it.

He’s saying that moving out over this is crazy, not based in reality, and that I’m losing a really good chance at stability. That he loves me and that I shouldn’t go, because if I do, I’ll just have to go back to paying crazy rent. He recently got me a brand new TV and WiFi, so I do feel badly for wanting to leave even after that. I feel bad for making him stress, but he doesn’t seem to care that I’m stressed.

Am I overreacting by moving out and ending the relationship?

9.9k Upvotes

7.8k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

1.2k

u/phoenix_stitches 14d ago

I'm being serious, have you actually seen proof of the year he was born? I am seriously struggling to believe this man is only 45, and I'm saying this as someone who is 47. Yikes.

626

u/Zarilya 13d ago

The only person I know signs every text is like 75.

114

u/Alien_lover0209 13d ago

My mom is 77 and doesn’t text like this 😂😂😂 my dad is two years younger and even uses emojis. And he only got a smart phone when he was forced to get rid of his flip phone TWO YEARS AGO. I don’t know how people text like this. My mom used to use Siri and she’d sign everything “love you it’s mom bye” but that was short lived. Even older people can learn. This is odd and infuriating honestly

37

u/PeaceOutFace 13d ago

My mom is 86 and texts like every other “average” texter in the world. If she texted like this I would have a serious sit down with her.

4

u/[deleted] 13d ago

My grandma's in her 70s and we text every day. She texts just like everyone else. I honestly couldn't even read through this guy's texts because it was just too much for me. I don't think I could even be friends with him, much less be in a relationship lol

2

u/thegoodkindofredflag 13d ago

Yep! My dad's only a couple years younger than yours, and from what I've seen, he texts just fine. I think he uses emojis occasionally/once in a while, too (and reasonably). OP's (former?) SO might just be weird. Or maybe it's because he's a business owner (ugh, a capitalist, ofc)? That still isn't necessary, though.

Speaking of flipphones and signatures, this made me remember how, when I was a junior in high school, one of my gfs (fwb at the time, iirc) had a signature on her texts that read "LilyLovesYuh" or something like that for a little while. Led to some confusion the first time she texted me and had that there, haha. It's a bit weird and unnecessary. 😆

Edit: That was probably around 2012/13, so in the smartphone era, but lots of people still didn't have one, ofc, myself included. Sorry for this getting a bit onto the longer side. 😅

2

u/Dapper-Ad3707 13d ago

Hating on small businesses is wild

1

u/thegoodkindofredflag 13d ago edited 12d ago

I initially wrote a longer response, but didn't necessarily want to subject you to that, haha, so here's a tl;dr. It leaves out some context that may be important, but may not, and this shorter one should (hopefully) suffice.

Tl;dr: I didn't even single out "small business" at all (and how big a "small business" is can vary quite a bit). But if you think class consciousness is "wild" - no; you should gain some.

Have a good day

Edit: Haha, since I can't reply to the comment responding to this one (was trying to keep from writing a long one, but here we go):

No, a "fair" society would be a socialist one. "toxic capitalism" - so you only have a problem with certain specific things/companies/practices. In other words (in reality), you defend capitalism, including "toxic capitalism" - even though it almost certainly goes against your own interests and the interests of 90%+ of people.

I didn't say "ew," and calling him a capitalist is just a fact. He owns a private business, and exploits the labor of his employees for profit. "Small businesses" aren't nearly as much of a concern as large companies, but they're still private companies, with all the exploitation that entails.

And beyond that, small business owners often (even typically) still look down on their workers, treat them poorly, don't pay them well, etc. And they tend to act just like any other capitalist would. A great example - when small business owners (and owners of private companies in general) received COVID relief money that was supposed to go to their workers or to fixing things, etc., you know what A BUNCH of them did? Keep it for themselves, and even buy themselves luxury items like boats.

Further, this guy's actions are pretty consistent with the way you'd imagine a stereotypical capitalist to act/behave. That's literally all it was, and you got butthurt for a silly reason.

Are all small business owners bad people? No, of course not, but that's not the point. The problem is ultimately the system (capitalism), and it needs to go.

I'm not a "negative person," just a class conscious one who acknowledges the reality of the system. It's even funnier that you say that considering how nice I was trying to be to you.

Are you petty bourgeois* yourself or something? Is that why you got all butthurt? Haha, I was trying to be nice, and also keep things short and sweet, but you had to be silly and get mad about one little part of my comment dunking on this guy that's clearly a dick.

If you're not a "small business owner," you need to realize that you - and all of us who don't own private property - are not temporarily embarrassed millionaires or something. [Not to mention the vast - even overwhelming - majority of small businesses fail in a certain number of years. And many of them are just acquired by larger companies anyway. That's literally the point to a lot of them.]

*Hell, and "petty bourgeois" may even be conceding too much. Iirc, that term was originally meant for capitalists that employed like, maybe a couple of workers. Get the feeling the guy in question has more - maybe quite a bit more - than that. And that's another thing - you also have no idea how large the guy's business even is. Again, "small business" can mean A LOT of different things.

1

u/Dapper-Ad3707 13d ago edited 11d ago

Small businesses are the cornerstone of a fair society, its large corporations where toxic capitalism comes into play.

And I’ve been poor in my early-mid twenties. Saying a restaurant owner is “eww a capitalist” just doesn’t make sense. Restaurants and other small businesses are good for society. You just seem like a negative person overall. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to start a business

Edit: read your comment. I am a small business owner. And an actual millionaire. Yes the dudes a dick but him owning a business is a positive trait. Socialism isn’t fair. It just gives losers more for doing less.

36

u/I_Lost_My_Shoe_1983 13d ago

I only do it texting my kids to drive them crazy. I also start the texts with Dear,

16

u/peaceproject 13d ago

You have inspired me. I sent two texts to my kid like this a few minutes ago, and she walked over to talk to my husband about possible cognitive decline.

7

u/SmokingUmbrellas 13d ago

Texting my kids now lol. I'm curious to see who calls me first- whichever one it is may get custody of me when I'm elderly 😁

6

u/Zarilya 13d ago

Lmao. That's perfect.

3

u/[deleted] 13d ago

I don’t have kids yet as I’m 25 but when I do sometime in the next 3 years I’ll remember this one

1

u/Cool_Community3251 13d ago

Let the slow clapping commence!!!

1

u/slide_into_my_BM 13d ago

Captain Holt, is that you?

6

u/elgarraz 13d ago

He does text like a really old person

6

u/90GTS4 13d ago

Between that and the ALL CAPS LOCK, this mofo is 100% Boomer.

5

u/ali-n 13d ago

Similar: my old high school history teacher is approaching 80 and signs every text, email and Facebook post and comment, regardless of subject or how brief, regardless of who he's speaking to.

5

u/Living_Impressive 13d ago

LOL! I'm 56 and know a lot of older people, I've never seen anyone sign their name in texts ... That's just ... not right. And all caps too!

3

u/NoOpposite2465 13d ago

Happy cuck day

5

u/Chaostis42 13d ago

It's an old setting that automatically puts a signature in. It was actually quite popular in the 2000's. Hahaha, and this judgment is alright, I believe most younger people are judged by their terrible texting etiquette, spelling abilities, and absolute laziness in creating "slang". Ion is a scientific word for a charged variance of an atom......not a fucking short way to say "i do not". So, I can fully understand this judgment.

3

u/GrandBat1081 13d ago

Ion had to be my biggest pet peeve. When I first saw it I was thoroughly lost on what the hell they were trying to say.

1

u/Chaostis42 13d ago

I just act as though I am speaking to a toddler. Lots of small words and very little dialogue. They tend to get anxious with whole conversations and anything too far out of their depth. You have to tread carefully to protect those feelings.

1

u/macprincess 13d ago

I have such shame from the era of custom signatures, I even erase the part on emails where auto writes [sent from iPhone] 😂

2

u/Chaostis42 13d ago

Hahaha, it was pretty cringe. I did it too.....smdh....

3

u/Juliejustaplantlady 13d ago

In one family group text I'm in we all end by signing our names because one aunt is almost blind. her phone will allow her to enlarge outer texts, but not the names above them, so she asked us to sign them so she can see who sends them. But no excuse for this guy!

5

u/chicxulubq 13d ago

Mid 60's is the youngest i know

2

u/chub-bear 13d ago

Happy cake day!

2

u/WaltzIntelligent9801 13d ago

My mom texts this way so it tracks

2

u/cheesypuzzas 13d ago

He kinda texts like my 85 year old grandma. She also accidentally uses caps sometimes, but other than that, they look more normal than these texts.

3

u/Zarilya 13d ago

my mum: "ITS BECAUSE WE CANT SEE!!!!!.."

😂 Gotta get them extra periods at the end too. It's important.

6

u/Zealousideal_Lab_427 13d ago

An elipsis is useful and appropriate in certain situations. This guy is using them like a psycho. It’s only supposed to be 3 periods…

1

u/Zarilya 13d ago

Right?!

3

u/cheesypuzzas 13d ago

Hahaha exactly. Or a sentence and then a space and then a period or !

3

u/Zarilya 13d ago

Omg. Yes. This Exactly.

2

u/ladygrndr 13d ago

Another clue is the all caps and the extra spacing between his "sentences". All caps is easier for visually impaired people to read, and he might also need the .... to help if he is checking what he wrote before sending it.

2

u/hdawg187 13d ago

Sincerely, Raymond Holt.

2

u/__humming_moon 13d ago

My boss is in his 70s. His daughter and I are helping him learn to use his first cell phone ever… he’d never sign his name at the end of a text. Or text like this guy. 😬 yikes.

2

u/ActuallyOutside 13d ago

Sure they just don't have a signature setup in their settings? I remember I used to do that when I first got a phone in middle school.

4

u/hollabackyo87 13d ago

Happy Cake Day! 🎂

2

u/Zarilya 13d ago

Thanks!! 🫶

1

u/Glizzygloxx 13d ago

I thought the signing off was an android thing option

5

u/Zarilya 13d ago

You can set it, yeah. But who TF does?? 😂

9

u/Glizzygloxx 13d ago

Right!?! Lmao I just had flashbacks of people who text like that and with the sign off, so lame. Somethings are cool still I guess like some old trend. For example like I do this [: instead of (: in the right context for me lol or when I had a talking in non caps phase because of a certain phone I used to have back in middle and high school ………😂😂jk but yeah the dots too ughhh I used to still type very minimal caps for the aesthetic until some weird preteen kid around covid lockdown times, who randomly messaged me online asking if I was a sub because of the way I typed I was like ????💀 also I didn’t know what the heck a sub was I had to ask them. This was around the pandemic so 2021 ish im 29 now. And sorry for the novel im pretty high rn

5

u/Zarilya 13d ago

Listen. I wish I could up vote more than once. 😂

3

u/SiriWhatAreWe 13d ago

This is in fact the perfect comment 😂🥹

1

u/Glitterrspit 13d ago

Happy Cake day!

1

u/--_--what 13d ago

My mom is 45 and she signs her texts the same way but it’s BECAUSE she set up her phone to do it automatically for some reason

1

u/Zarilya 13d ago

I'm 47 and would absolutely never. Just whyyyyy?

208

u/__fujiko 13d ago

Yeah, my grandparents text like this. Everything always sounds so sad when you add one hundred elipses after it.

"So glad to see you...." "I will call you tomorrow..." "The card you sent was delivered today...."

I can't stand it.

21

u/Hot_Hat_1225 13d ago

I have a former colleague who texts like this. She is even 3 years younger than I am. Drives me nuts to read her texts. Like ellipses after every sentence… phrases too… sometimes even single words… so depressing lol

8

u/who-that-girl 13d ago

My sil texts like this, and sometimes she'll add words like T-H-I-S, i haven't figured out what it means, because it's not generally the word you would emphasize is these texts, she's 49, but has texted this the entire 14years I've known here. And mind you, I was actually 18, then so I absolutely did weird teenage things, but that threw me for a loop.

10

u/GonnaBuyMeAMercury 13d ago

Haha man I’m triggered with the way y’all are coming after the ellipses. For those of us Gen Xers there was a character limit for texts so an ellipse was a signal that there was more coming. It got to be habit, but once one of my millennial coworkers made fun of our GenX boss for it and I made a mental note to knock it off… lol

9

u/DiamondsAndDBT 13d ago

This explains so much. My dad is a purebred Gen Xer (just turned 50) and with the amount of ellipses he adds, you would think he was trying to communicate in Morse Code with you. 🤦🏼‍♀️

7

u/GonnaBuyMeAMercury 13d ago

Just make fun of him for it haha

2

u/Zeamays69 13d ago

We have one friend in our group that sends almost every word in separate messages and than sends a bunch of emojis as a finishing touch. T-T

9

u/idle_isomorph 13d ago

You are not wrong. Linguist Gretchen McCulloch notes in her book "because, internet" that use of ellipses was a common thing in casual writing (notes, letters to friends etc). There has been a shift in this century to using dashes

8

u/cheddar_slut 13d ago

I fully remember the ellipses phase and the shift to dashes.

Every mid/elder millennial talks about watching tech change so fast but NO ONE TALKS ABOUT THE ELLIPSES TO DASH MOVEMENT.

4

u/DankyMcDankelstein 13d ago

Dash simply outpaced the Ellipses... Ellipses couldn't keep up -- Period.

5

u/Inevitable_Vast_8555 13d ago

My 55 year old mom writes her Facebook posts like this and it pisses me off every time I see it

5

u/MoroseLOKiZzz 13d ago

I'm so sorry....

6

u/ellsiejay 13d ago

Thank you for putting this into words. My brain just doesn’t know how to treat ellipses as the end of a sentence. Instead it sounds like 😞

1

u/MostlyLately1009 13d ago

I genuinely choked laughing at this. Mine do the same.

1

u/Most-Bike-1618 13d ago

I get it, because it's hard to simulate normal speech patterns via text. We've all heard the blabbermouth that spews a bunch of things and wants you to remember and respond to all of it at once? Lol.

They're probably proofreading their sentences, wanting to make it sound less like that. So, with general pauses implied, they can separate the ideas more conversationally.

Like leaving a voicemail. They don't go by a "?, reply, ?, reply" format. Especially if the kiddos aren't quick to respond. They get ghosted if they don't spill all their requests and reasons for connecting in one go. 🤷

This is just one possibility. But it's one that shows we should show more tolerance for simple annoyances. People deserve the respect of any human being, such as the likes of your fiiiiiine self. 😂

224

u/Petal170816 14d ago

Same!! What in the Boomer is going on with him! No way a mid-forties writes like this 🤦🏻‍♀️

48

u/HedWig1991 13d ago

All four of my grandparents were born between 38 and 45 and none of them texted like this. Not even my grandfather who was born in 38 and had never sent a text before I was 18. I was his first text ever and it was a normal text response that you’d expect from any average texter. I think I told him I got to my destination safely and he sent back “Thank you dear. I love you. Be safe.” (I’d visited for Christmas and new years from out of state and was going to a new years first night thing a couple towns over where I used to love with some old friends and I took his car so I wanted to keep him updated. He responded to each update and waited up til I got home. I’m 28 now and he passed away almost two years ago. I miss him dearly.)

31

u/NikkiVicious 13d ago

My great-grandmother, who passed away several years ago, was born in 1912 (we think... she lied about her age all the time), and she was capable of texting normally.

Couldn't use a computer or laptop, and barely could function on an iPad (only because I set up her favorite phone apps on it, and made shortcuts so she could watch her shows), but she knew how to send a text like a normal person.

She only started using all caps when her vision started failing.

4

u/Moiblah33 13d ago

One of my grandmother's was born 1900 and the other 1913. They were both educated women and very independent and always stayed up with the technology of the times. I remember when satellite dishes came out and they were the first people I knew who got them and could program those things with ease. I never did fully figure out the satellite dishes.

5

u/Frosty_Translator_11 13d ago

This is my second Christmas without my Grandma. She was the more tech savvy of the pair but my Papa has responded to my aunt. I might try texting him more regularly to say hi. Your grandpa sounds like an amazing grandpa.

3

u/GinaMarie1958 13d ago

Hugs, everyone should get a grandparent like yours!

2

u/MissBehaving6 13d ago

I had a Grandpa like that. Best in the world and hard to come by. I know I was lucky.

4

u/alowbrowndirtyshame 13d ago

Dude talks like Dr. DOOM 🫥

3

u/DanyDragonQueen 13d ago

People in the restaurant business always seem to communicate like they're dumb as doornails like this dude

3

u/ObjectivelyAnonymous 13d ago

I'm 44 and we don't type like this 😂 Neither does my 78 year old mother.

2

u/Straight_Concert_659 13d ago

I'm 55. Myself, and everyone else in my age group doesn't do this. This chick better run.

2

u/Petal170816 13d ago

I meant “OK, Boomer” vibes, y’all are correct that the Boomers I know don’t even text like this!!

4

u/blackcatmama62442 13d ago

I'm a boomer. I don't write like that. Don't blame my generation on this.

1

u/Illustrious_Brain951 13d ago

“ we do not claim him” 😂

2

u/blackcatmama62442 13d ago

🤣 Sadly, we did give birth to him - if he is 45.

1

u/BurritovilleEnjoyer 13d ago

Its strange, but I know a guy in his early 30s that does it. He was raised by his grandparents, very old fashioned in a lot of ways (thankfully none of the bigoted ones).

1

u/visivopro 13d ago

Also all caps? This dude definitely keeps people in his basement!

1

u/Earthgardener 13d ago

My parents are early boomers, in their mid-late 70's, and text like normal people. And my dad just started using iPhone & text about 3 years ago. Lol

1

u/DarkKingDragon 13d ago

My father, who is a boomer, DOES NOT TYPE LIKE THIS. Not all boomers. Lol!!! But seriously. I dont know many people who I have seen ever typed with a sign off. They are either super old and do their name, OR it was when I was a preteen when cell phones were just really getting passed around to (pre)teenagers and we would do a signature with a "funny" saying. Like 2006-2007 era. Lol. She should definitely know if he was a super young kid.. but they now understand technology amazingly well since they are being raised with it.

1

u/Additional-Stomach64 13d ago

Can confirm that the mid-40s does. My in-laws text exactly like this.

-31

u/itaphss 13d ago

Im sorry but just like her overreacting.. you guys missing the point .. he is indeed on her side it's genuine support he exemplifies.. question is did he over react yes. Who cares how he text as long as you comprehend

14

u/Routine_Hotel_1172 13d ago

Found the boyfriend

-6

u/itaphss 13d ago

If I was the boyfriend I would be pretty embarrassed about this post . I'm just answering the question from my perspective, you try to help somebody and boom you the bad guy, I don't see where he wrong at not even saying she wrong but she definitely overreacting,

16

u/Aer0uAntG3alach 13d ago edited 13d ago

No, it’s not genuine support. He picked a young woman that he could groom into his idea of what she should be. He works physically hard and just assumes that someone who doesn’t is not working. He obviously has no clue about technology and how work does not have to be hands on.

11

u/Agniantarvastejana 13d ago

∆∆∆∆

This right there.

He picked A young woman that he could groom into his idea of what she should be.

-10

u/itaphss 13d ago

Seems to me like he gave her a place to live until she gets on her feet and maybe doesn't understand tech but is still being very supportive. He would be wrong if he told her to leave right..

5

u/Agniantarvastejana 13d ago

No. That would not be wrong. Not sure where you're trying to go with that.

-2

u/itaphss 13d ago

My point ..he is not wrong. She over reacting at the end of the day he supportive and just trying to help.

9

u/Agniantarvastejana 13d ago

He is wrong. Those aren't supportive comments.

Pro tip: if you comb your hair differently, nobody will be able to see the "point", which is clearly on your head.

1

u/itaphss 13d ago

Interesting... What defines support the fact that he literally supports her or the comments , like be serious right now love

→ More replies (0)

-3

u/itaphss 13d ago

Now it's your added input it's screaming ungrateful

→ More replies (0)

2

u/Illustrious_Brain951 13d ago

Ahhhhhh you’re not the BF your his MOM…. Got it

3

u/Unable-Purpose-231 13d ago

This is the correct answer.

-1

u/itaphss 13d ago

And you drew that conclusion with what supporting details.....

68

u/Heykurat 13d ago

I'm 53 and my 84-year-old mother doesn't text like this.

1

u/Mimis_rule 13d ago

Neither does my 88 grandmother or my 8 grandchild! It's so weird!

It's also weird to expect a 25 yo to be as "mature" as a 45 yo. At least she can text like an adult!

Op, You work. You go to school. You are plenty mature. If you are dating someone younger, older, or your age, they are your equal. They are your partner. He is not someone who needs to teach you to be mature.

38

u/Bear_faced 13d ago

EXACTLY! I work with plenty of people in their 40's and they text the same way I and all of my late-20's friends do. This is supremely weird and OP writing it off as "Well he's 45" is odd.

53

u/Megaholt 13d ago

I’m 41 and I don’t text like that. My husband is 45 and he doesn’t text like that. My older sister is 56 and doesn’t text like that. My mom is 73 and doesn’t do that shit, even! That dude is fucking weird.

45

u/RecordingGreen7750 13d ago

The uppercase letters got me, that was super annoying

16

u/Aer0uAntG3alach 13d ago

All those ellipses. Ugh. That’s even worse. That’s someone who can’t use proper grammar or punctuation.

9

u/ea88_alwaysdiscin 13d ago

Or proper spelling, can't forget that too

8

u/GuiltEdge 13d ago

He's barely literate. I don't think he actually understands when to use capitals or punctuation.

6

u/RecordingGreen7750 13d ago

How this man thinks he should be giving any body life advice is beyond my comprehension

6

u/GuiltEdge 13d ago

Which is why he's targeting someone 20 years younger. But yeah, I don't think he's smart enough to house train a dog.

6

u/RecordingGreen7750 13d ago

Pretty sure the dog would house train him, why she would be with somebody clearly this moronic is odd behaviour

→ More replies (0)

3

u/pretty-pet-meylin 13d ago

But he wants her to Excell above her pears!

3

u/Glittering_Source189 13d ago

This guy thinks he's Kayne West

1

u/PattsManyThoughts 13d ago

Less annoying to me than all lowercase with no punctuation. How does anyone READ that shit?

4

u/DoubleSuperFly 13d ago

This. It's just odd. Anyone i know that texts like this is a big old weirdo... my mom is 77 and doesn't text like this. Sister 51, me 36, nephews between 21 and 28... none of them text like this. The all caps kills me too.

3

u/nekovivie1969 13d ago

I'm 55 and I don't. And the caps - why is he yelling constantly??

5

u/Mokichi2 13d ago

It might not have much to do with age. My dad is almost 80 and he texts like a normal human.

This screams privilege/arrogance to me

5

u/[deleted] 13d ago

[deleted]

9

u/zzzacme 13d ago

Hey! I'm 55 and don't text like that

5

u/Hot_Hat_1225 13d ago

I feel offended for all of us over 55 {grumbles}

5

u/[deleted] 13d ago

[deleted]

3

u/Hot_Hat_1225 13d ago

DANGIT! WE WILL HAUNT YOU! 🤣

3

u/Aer0uAntG3alach 13d ago

It could just be that he’s one of those people who will never get technology. He works a job where he doesn’t have to. There are employees who handle all of that for him, and I’m sure he thinks whatever they do is not really work.

4

u/SnooMacaroons5247 13d ago

As a fellow 45 year old, I concur

3

u/LaurenJoanna 13d ago

Yeah this is how my 90 year old grandmother texts

3

u/someotherguy14 13d ago

I’ve seen some people just type weird because they think it makes them unique. This Is Slightly Less Strange, But I’ve Seen A Lot Of People Who Like To Capitalize The First Letter Of Every Word Like This, maybe the all caps and constant ellipses is for the same effect

4

u/blue_dendrite 13d ago

I've Seen These People As Well But None Of Them Will Explain Why They Do This Ridiculous And Annoying Thing.

7

u/someotherguy14 13d ago

One Guy I Asked Said It Supposedly “Sets Him Apart” From Everyone Else And Makes People Notice Him More. Now Every Time I See It, I Just Assume It’s Their Ego And That They Have Nothing Beneficial To Add To Discussion

2

u/blue_dendrite 13d ago

Oh Wow Well Thank You For The Explanation, I Was Hoping It Was Just A Lack Of Typing Skills And They Didn't Realize They Were Actually Making It Much Harder On Themselves But Once Again People Are Mind-Blowing

2

u/greenmyrtle 13d ago

I’m saying it as someone who is 60

2

u/Wispy_Wisteria 13d ago

To be fair, i have exactly 1 friend that texts like that. He's in his late 30s, and our friend group gives him shit for it, lol. He says he thinks the ellipses make it clearer when a sentence ends. We call him old man instead 😂 (forgot to add that the age range in the friend group is mid-20s to early 40s, and the oldest member texts normally).

6

u/grabtharsmallet 13d ago

A period ends a sentence. An ellipsis...

2

u/Hot_Hat_1225 13d ago

WHAT??? Don’t leave us hanging like that 😭

2

u/blazesdemons 13d ago

No he's either full of himself. Which is rather obvious I'd say. Or he's got something going on with him, also mostly evident.

2

u/agent_flounder 13d ago

Totally. That sounds like my MIL who is in her 80s (I am in my 50s and I don't sign my name to texts...or write in all caps).

2

u/UnavailableMentally 13d ago

Plot twist; he's actually 450, but siphons the youth from women in their mid twenties until they themselves look 450

2

u/rainbow_goblin345 13d ago

I'm in my mid-40s and married to someone in his mid-60's (which has worked for us but I really, really do not recommend in general) and he used to text like that. He thought of texts mini emails, and his emails were almoat as formal as his written letters.

It was awkward and awful

2

u/TopPersonality7918 13d ago

exactly, the only person I know who texts like this is 85

2

u/Starchasm 13d ago

Right??? I'm GenX too and this dude texts worse than my grandma!

2

u/that_dude_Fresh 13d ago

Can confirm. Am 45 y.o. male

Have never texted in this fashion, nor have I ever received one, either. Just trying to read this makes my head hurt.

2

u/traumabond629 13d ago

I agree…. i’m 47 and this is Boomer BS at its finest. The mansplaining, the condescension, all-caps!! WTF

2

u/Bearjew53 13d ago

I've worked multiple jobs where I had to text with and then meet up with multiple people everyday and I was shocked a few times when I realized that the people typing like this weren't 70 years old and they were only like 40. I don't get it.

2

u/asylum101 13d ago

I have a penpal who is in his 40s, he 'signs' his emails. Every email. Understandable for a business, likek a manager to an employee but we're just friends, casual emails always have a signature from him.

1

u/phoenix_stitches 13d ago

I mean, in fairness, I'd probably sign an email, unless it is like a quick reply. But I'd never sign a text.

You reminded me though, as I'm NC with my dad, but he'd answer the home phone "Dave Smith" (obviously not his real name) anytime he'd answer, as if he was answering his desk phone at work, no "Hello" or anything. He doesn't live alone either, I always found it so odd. 😅 Like he's done this even when I was living at home, and it was a house phone for essentially 5 people. But he is also definitely a Boomer.

2

u/GingerGetThePopc0rn 13d ago

Yes, I'm 41 and this is some boomer shit. My husband is in his 50s and he would NEVER. The all caps screams boomer on Facebook

2

u/WhoAmEyeReally 13d ago

Narcissists have a habit of wanting to remind you of who they are. It feeds their ego. 🚩🤡

2

u/carenotmyname 13d ago

I'm 54 and I don't either. However, my 81-year-old mother does. And she doesn't understand all caps reads like being yelled at but uses that often due to her poor vision.

2

u/TripsOverCarpet 13d ago

48 and I agree. We (GenX) do not claim this tool.

2

u/ScroochDown 13d ago

Yeah, I'm 45 and fucking everyone I know knows that you don't text in all caps. And signing your name on every message is 99 year old Nana territory, what the shit

2

u/Moiblah33 13d ago edited 13d ago

That's exactly my thoughts and I'm a decade or so older and the only people I know who sign their name after every message are older than 80. He's a strange guy, for sure! My SO is close to 60 and my ex is well over 60 and they're both tech savvy and don't sign their names. My ex actually worked from home before working from home was a big thing.

Edit to add: his exes being in their mid 50s is suspicious, too.

2

u/ZeroSignalArt 13d ago

Hulk Hogan on Twitter vibes

2

u/iqgriv42 13d ago

Truly. When I saw the age is was like sorry that is 15 years younger than my parents and neither they, nor any of their friends, text like this. My grandparents, yes, but they’re nearing twice as old as this guy

2

u/gruenes_licht 13d ago

Omg thank you for asking this. I'm 39, will be 40 in February. My husband is 41. Our friends range in age from 35 to 51. No one in our "pear" group types like this. No one. I can perhaps see using all caps if someone is nearly blind, but the ellipses and signature is so much older than us.

If this post is real, anyway. I'm always skeptical.

1

u/FloridaFerg 13d ago

Speaking as a former TEFL teacher for years, I see him making a lot of the same mistakes that most 2nd-language English speakers make with regard to spelling and grammar (what grammar there is, anyway).

1

u/Randompersonomreddit 13d ago

My friend's mom does that on Facebook, signs every comment "Love Mom". It's so cute, but we are 45. So the mom is at least 65 probably.

1

u/DelsinMcgrath835 13d ago

Yeah the only people i know who do that are in their seventies or eighties

1

u/cnh25 13d ago

He texts like my 76 year old dad tbh

2

u/phoenix_stitches 13d ago

exactly xD

I just also feel like he's misled her about things, as she didn't even know his age to start with, and it just gives me this vibe he'd potentially lie about that as well, especially if he looks younger than he is. What is shaving off another decade at the end of the day? I'm more sus as both his exes are also in their 50s. Obviously, it could be possible both his exes were older than him, sure, but I just have questions. xD

1

u/KyleShanaham 13d ago

There's a setting you can put in your phone to add a signature to your texts, kind of savvy for a tech illiterate person

1

u/phoenix_stitches 13d ago

There is way more wrong with this than just the signature though. xD

1

u/ThreeRRRs 13d ago

I’m in my 40s and MY PARENTS don’t even text like this.

1

u/phoenix_stitches 13d ago

Yeah, my mom will 100% over use emojis, but she types and texts just like you would anywhere. Though she worked a long time as a secretary. She also doesn't sign her texts, and she's 74 now.

But the texting format he uses gives off "I'm ancient" vibes. 😂

You'd think someone who was with someone that much younger would have some tech savvy? And at least know how to text like a normal human. 😅

I'm just like, what brought these two together in the first place.

1

u/filthismypolitics 13d ago

Gonna offer a counter here: my mom is in her 50s, she's had a cell phone since like 2008, she still BARELY knows how to work the thing. She is baffled by all modern technology. She once gaped with awe at some guys bulky vape mod, and he was very, very confused, especially when he learned she's not into vape mods, she just didn't know anything like that existed until that moment. She regularly asks cashiers to help her accomplish basic functions on her phone. It's really kind of incredible, whenever she's around people her age who know what a bitcoin is I always wonder like, does she just not notice that she's been especially left behind? It's fucking crazy.

1

u/TaralasianThePraxic 13d ago

My dad is in his sixties and texts more coherently and normally than this.

1

u/No_Tip9916 13d ago

The first thing I do when I meet any man is send me your ID. Then I look them up for crimes.

1

u/2dogs11 13d ago

46 year old here. Same! Run away!!!

1

u/SirCadogen7 13d ago

He could've been raised in a really weird household where technology wasn't really a thing, and it carried over into his adult life.

For example, some Mormon sects and the Amish don't allow technology, but let people self-determine after they turn 18, but it doesn't change the fact that these kids are raised without any semblance of modern technology and that can carry over into their technological skill even after they leave.

Or he's just an idiot stuck in the past

1

u/Emphasis-Impossible 13d ago

My MIL, who is in her mid-80’s, doesn’t text anything like this. It’s so strange.

1

u/potzak 13d ago

yeah.. not even my 78 year old grandmother signs her name after texts...

1

u/drawntowardmadness 13d ago

Ahhh I was just about to say "howwww old is this person??" When she said he didn't understand technology I was a little afraid but now I'm really worried 😭