← What's Your Texting Reply Style?
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Turns one line into ten — the literary artist of messaging

The Text Essayist

📊 18% of participants got this type

Your texting style is 'essay.' When someone asks 'wyd?' your reply starts at minimum three lines. People have suspected you're writing a thesis instead of texting, haven't they? But this is your sincerity. You want to deliver accurate, rich information to the other person, and your perfectionism of not wanting a single word to cause misunderstanding produces these masterpieces.

When you text, scrolling is required. Ask for a restaurant recommendation and you get the full package: menu picks + price range + ambiance + parking info + personal review. Make plans and you get a pros-and-cons analysis for each candidate date. Emotional support gets the full four-act structure: empathy, analysis, solution, and encouragement. From the recipient's perspective, you're basically a human blog post.

The biggest advantage of this style? Zero misunderstanding. Your messages deliver context so perfectly that the other person rarely needs follow-up questions. Plus, your long texts carry genuine sincerity, so the recipient feels 'wow, this person really cares about me this much.' The text essay is proof of love.

But... the recipient needs energy too. Especially when you send a long message to a one-word friend, they might feel reply-pressure and end up leaving you on read instead. Try leading with 'the one-line summary' and adding details only when asked. Keep your rich expressiveness while also considering the other person's energy — add that to your skills and you become the texting god.

🔍 Key Traits

  • Reply to 'wyd?' has never been under three lines
  • Restaurant recommendations come out at blog-review level
  • You format paragraphs even in text messages
  • You keep adding clarifications to prevent any possible misunderstanding
  • You double-check spelling before hitting send

💪 Strengths

  • Perfect communication with zero room for misunderstanding
  • The recipient can clearly feel the sincerity and care
  • All information delivered in one shot — no follow-up needed

🌱 Watch Out For

  • Can create reply-pressure for the recipient
  • Key message can get buried in the wall of text
  • Pouring too much energy into each text can lead to fatigue

💚 Great Match

Another Text Essayist — You respect each other's long texts and enjoy an endless exchange.

⚡ Potential Clash

The One-Word Wonder — Replying 'k' to your ten-line opus causes an existential crisis.

💌 A Word from PSY

Your long texts are brimming with sincerity and care. Where else would you find someone who puts this much thought into a text? But consider the other person's energy level too — try leading with 'one-line summary + ask me for details.' Deliver the full version only to people who want it, and satisfaction goes way up.

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