Dear Men, Good Morning Texts Are Still Elite, Don’t Slack

Dear men, let’s clear something up: good morning texts will never go out of style. I don’t care how busy you are, how late you stayed up, or how much you think “she already knows I care.” That little ping at the start of the day? It matters. And if you’ve convinced yourself it doesn’t , you’re slacking.

Good morning texts aren’t about the words. It’s not like women wake up desperate to read “gm” with no vowels. It’s about the intention. It says, before the world demanded my time, I thought about you. That’s powerful. That’s effort. That’s the difference between being one of many and being the one she remembers when she pours her coffee.

And no, it doesn’t have to be Shakespeare. A simple, “Good morning, hope you crush your day” beats radio silence. Bonus points if it’s personal: “Good luck on that meeting you mentioned” or “Hope your commute isn’t hell today.” Effort isn’t about length—it’s about listening.

You know what’s not elite? Silence. Disappearing for hours, resurfacing at night with a dry “wyd” like you didn’t just miss the easiest opportunity to set the tone. A man who skips the good morning text consistently isn’t mysterious, he’s careless. And careless gets you left on read faster than you can type “sup.”

Here’s the secret: women screenshot good morning texts. They show their friends. They reread them when the day gets heavy. It’s not just a text—it’s consistency, reassurance, and a little slice of attention that goes a long way. If you think that’s trivial, congratulations—you’ve just told on yourself.

Tessa’s Final Thought:
Good morning texts aren’t optional, they’re strategy. Set the tone early, or risk being forgotten by noon.

Disclaimer:
This series is for entertainment and perspective. Connection is built on the small things, don’t underestimate their weight.

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