Reply guys' exist in the inboxes of multiple women simultaneously. When a target finally responds, they retreat. Why? | Lucinda Price
Briefly

Reply guys' exist in the inboxes of multiple women simultaneously. When a target finally responds, they retreat. Why? | Lucinda Price
"After taking some time to painstakingly remove the dagger from my heart, I asked for more information. She told me that a reply guy is a person typically male who exists in the inboxes of multiple women simultaneously. His modus operandi is simple: start and maintain multiple low-effort conversations with as many warm bodies as possible. But his motives? Largely unclear."
"A few years ago, a hot guy started following me on Instagram. Very nice, I said to myself in Borat's voice. Still got it. Then, he started replying to my Instagram stories. A laughing reaction here, a haha reply there. He was clearly flirting with me! After a few weeks of consistent interaction, I told a co-worker about this guy on Instagram who is, like, obsessed with me."
"I posted about this phenomenon on Instagram, eager to know how many others had been on the receiving end of a reply guy's replies. The response was overwhelming. Story of my life, one respondent told me. I have had the same reply guys come out of the woodwork every time I'm single. People told me stories of reply guys who had been messaging them for years some would be legally entitled to long service leave."
A reply guy is typically male and occupies multiple women's inboxes simultaneously. He starts and maintains many low-effort conversations by replying to Instagram stories with laughs and brief comments. The motives behind this behavior are unclear. Reply guys can persist for years, resurfacing whenever a woman is single. They often retreat when a target suggests moving the interaction offline. Social media posts about reply guys elicit widespread recognition and personal stories, revealing the pattern's ubiquity. Some targets experience intense interest while traveling, followed by silence upon return, even when the reply patterns continue without escalation.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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