Sending text messages is quite common here. Everyone seems to do it, I think partially because it is cheaper than talking to someone. However, this sometimes causes confusion because you don't have the tone of voice of the other person and there is a different grammar/spelling. I now can read most of them pretty quickly but every now and then, I'll get a message that I have to read multiple times before I understand it (usually because it is a bunch of letters strung together that I have to "say" in my head before I understand it).
In December, I went on a course up in Belfast. While there, I met a few interesting people. One of the girls and myself swapped numbers. I texted her a happy new year message and from that we set up a time to meet up. While texting back and forth to each other, she said "AM available" on such a day. Thinking in terms of texting abreviations, I thought she meant that she was available in the morning and she was suggestingbreakfast. So, I suggested a morning time and a couple breakfast places. She texted back asking (thankfully) to meet up later. Later, I reread her original message and realized that she meant "am" as in "I am available" so I sent her a message explaining my error and asking if she wanted later. She agreed but had reread my messages and asked if I still wanted breakfast. After many many messages (it really would have been easier to ring her but I wasn't sure of protocol for it), we agreed to meet at a reasonable time for lunch. And we had good fun with a three hour lunch!
Yesterday, I got a text from a friend that we were supposed to see in a couple weeks saying she'd need to reschedule. Again, after a few messages back and forth, we found a weekend in March. I sent her a message with LOL, we have to schedule in March. Well, she didn't know what LOL meant and asked. It took me two messages to explain it to her and that I was expressing humor that we couldn't find any common times
in February.
These two miscommunications highlight some of the difficulties of texting for me. I still don't know the etiquitte. I don't know when to abbreviate or with whom (e.g. don't codeswitch well). Usually I write the whole message and then start abbreviating when the othe person does. I know there is a social code here, I just haven't totally figured out what it is. Some of it is person specific of course, some may be generational. Anyone out there want to tell me the rules?
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
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1 comment:
i keep getting a lone text message sayig just mg...any ideas what it could mean..
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