The tendency of the text “thanks” is warm, diffused, but a little cringe: “seriousness through irony”

The gratitude goes to digital and the millennials lead the post full of emoji.

The last way to say “i love you, man” is not with a beer or a bear hug.

It is with a post-penal text: a digital heart of heart letter sent immediately after Brunch, a night or even a 15-minute facetime.


“Do you know when someone sends you a text message just after returning home to hang out with them and say,” I had a great time, so nice to see you “? What God’s gift,” held the Tiktok user @carlabezanson (above). tiktok.com/@carlabezanson

The gist?

“Oops, I needed it. So grateful for you!”

Affectionate and aggressively serious, these monitoring messages, called “millennial notes of thanks”-are floods chats of groups and mailboxes with a wave of feelings.

“Do you know when someone sends you a text message just after going home hanging with them and say, as:” I had a great time, so nice to see you “? What God’s gift,” Tiktok’s user dirty in @carlabezanson in a viral video that he likes more than 850,000.

Another user Mushy, @tpwkky, said, “One thing of me is that I will send the text” Thank you to hang out “with me” immediately after spending the time. I love to say to the people of my life that BC is imported is short and you should appreciate them while you can still (“.

Cringe? Maybe. Cute? Absolutely.

And according to a 2023 ONEPOLL study for Josh Cellars, the North -Americans are at the same wavelength: the average person says “thanks” six times a day, which totalizes more than 2,200 expressions of thanks a year.

83% say they try to practice gratitude daily. Millennies just choose to do it with a digital newspaper entry sent at 9:47 pm

Even Z Z is capturing feelings.

“ Fighting against the desire to make text messages to my friends, “ thanks for uploading -with me today, it has been a lot of fun: D literally, why I will see the sunrise tomorrow ‘every time we have just hung,’ ‘the user joked @thatsorav3n_ in a tiktok dripping with sarcasm (and more than 573,000 likes).

The generational division is clear: the millennials bring their hearts to their texts. Gen Z prefers his with a thick layer of irony and a wink.

“I feel like it is a very great thing, seriousness through irony,” said Andrew Pattheude, 27, he told Bustle. “It’s like a layer of protection say something you really feel.”

However, the Minister for Mental Health with Licenses, Kathryn Lee, says that millennials may be in something.

“The millennials would probably prefer more from this face to face connection, because they grew up with this,” he said at the exit. When they finally succeed, “they will surely say” thanks “.,


The Z gene and the millennials may be adopting the trend for different reasons.
The Z gene and the millennials may be adopting the trend for different reasons. Wollertz – Stock.adobe.com

In fact, thank you is not just a warm and diffused feeling: it is a complete movement.

The post was previously reported on the aforementioned study Onepoll and as 57% of North -Americans say “thanks” more often than in recent years.

An amazing 40% even maintains a list of written gratitude, while others consider, from their families and friends to their heads and baristas.

Tiktok’s user @paige_netting suggested it better: “Try not to send a” thanks for hanging out with me, I really appreciate being together “after each casual stay with friends.”

Of course, some people feel closer to their loved ones during the holidays, when 76% of the study said they are more connected.

But for millennials, the new gratitude season is all year round and always starts with: “Hey, it was a lot of fun.”

And sometimes this is more than enough.

Like @thatsorav3n_ it says: “You are literally why tomorrow I will see the sunrise.”

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Image Source : nypost.com

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