How To Follow-Up Your Communication Via Text After Your First Date
June 4, 2010 by Angel Bustos
Filed under Free Dating
Have you just come back from a first date and are wondering when you should send your date a text message? You may have found this article after spending some time thinking and deciding to look for advice on the subject.
I can offer my advice on this subject, based on my experiences with situations just like yours. I can tell you how long you should wait before sending a text and what you should include in the message. Hopefully, this advice will help you overcome a potentially awkward situation.
Communication via text message is quite a new phenomenon, as it has only been in practice for ten years or so. It’s taken on quite a position of importance since then.
In the days before texting, most people called a day or two after a date to let their date know that they had a good time. Of course, this is still acceptable, but many prefer to use the quick and easy text message to communicate after a date.
With a new form of communication comes new etiquette, however, and you can drive yourself crazy trying to figure out the proper way to send a text after a date.
I think the best thing to do is send out a short text within 24 hours of your date. You can even send it the same night, but make it a quick one.
This first text message should be funny and friendly, not serious. Making a reference to something that happened on the date is a great way to break the ice. It’s not necessary to mention that you had fun on the date, since you’ll be showing this just by sending the message.
This message can start up a conversation in which you can exchange texts in a low-pressure situation. Texting at this time will also keep you in your date’s mind so that you already have a lead-in when you talk on the phone again after the date.
When you do call after a day or two, you’ll find it easier to carry on a conversation since you’ll certainly learn more about the other person through your text conversations.
Check out more of this author’s tips on topics such as crossover Ethernet cable and broadband satellite Internet access.






