Imagine reading a message that sounds polite on the surface but is clearly dripping with barely contained irritation... π€¦ββοΈ
Thomas Middleditch thought he was being professional: I already answered this, let me reference my previous message. But phrases like "as per my last message" are universally read as passive-aggressive, even if that wasn't the intention.
Most people who do this don't think they're being rude. It feels like a polite redirect: "I'm just pointing them to what I already said."
But in text, tone is easily lost and these phrases carry a sharp subtext: you should have read what I wrote. They create tension, defensiveness, and make people dread asking follow-up questions.
The same goes for:
Say what you mean, kindly!
Repeating the answer without the sarcastic wrapper takes the same effort β and it keeps the conversation friendly instead of adversarial.
Instead of passive-aggressive callbacks, try:
Direct beats diplomatic-but-mean. People remember how your messages made them feel. A curt "as I said" lingers far longer than a friendly re-confirmation.
When done right, everyone stays on the same team. π