Way back in October 2008, my now husband and I went on our first date. On our one year anniversary, his gift to me was a Word doc of all of our text messages since our first date (what he likes to refer to as #thegiftofdata). This was especially high tech back in the day (given that we both had feature phones) and what I considered to be the most thoughtful gift ever (given that we are both nerds).
To celebrate our six year anniversary, I decided to take his present to the next level. I took a look at all of our text messages from our first year of dating and compared them with our text messages from the past year as an engaged couple and then newlyweds. I started by looking at the words we used in our text messages six years ago versus present day.
First of all, we can clearly see that my husband has an obsession with the word “home”. As for me, my early twenties self frequently started conversations with the term “hey”, and more recently I seem to have decided to no longer greet my husband, but instead agree with most of the things he texts me.
I then looked at the frequency of specific terms we used in our text messages when we started dating compared to the past year.
Our conversations changed from “hey, what’s up?” to “ok, sounds good”. We stopped saying each other’s names in our text messages. We don’t say in “love” as much anymore. Several words stayed relatively consistent over the years though, such as “home” and “dinner”. I took a look at the actual text messages that contained these words, and found that although the terms stayed the same, the context they were used in actually changed over time.
The main difference is that while we were dating, we didn’t see each other every day, so a lot of our communication had to happen via text. We’d often message the other person to see what they were doing or tell them that we were thinking of them. As a married couple, since we’re together all the time, we set up date nights and say sweet things to each other in person, so texting is mostly used to confirm logistics or share random thoughts.
Since the content of our text messages changed so much, I decided to look and see if the time of day we’d send text messages to each other changed as well. I focused on the messages we sent each other during the month after our first date, our engagement and our wedding.
While we were dating, we started thinking about each other around 3pm in the afternoon and we’d send each other text messages until 3am in the morning. As a married couple, our texting schedule has pretty much flipped. We text all through the workday and never at night.
We see the same story here. As a new couple, since we were apart the majority of the time, we had to check in with the other person every now and then, especially during the evening and late at night when we had no idea who they were with! It was also to tell the other person that we were out late doing something cool without them… and wishing they were there, of course.
As a committed couple, the only time of the day that we aren’t together is during the workday, so that’s when we text. We know exactly where the other person is each evening and if we’re doing something cool, it’s likely that we’re in it together and telling each other about it face to face.
Overall, our text messages started out very flirty and personal. Since we were new in our relationship, we made sure the things we said were interesting and thoughtful. As our relationship progressed, we spent more time together and got more comfortable with each other. Our text messages became more predictable, but only because all of the unpredictable things were said in person. We no longer have to text “I love you” from a distance in the middle of the night. I can now roll over, snuggle with my husband and whisper it into his ear.
To my husband: happy anniversary and I hope you enjoy your 2014 version of #thegiftofdata.
I ADORE this!!… I’m studying marketing and this makes me giggle!!!
Very funny and familiar! My partner sent me a word cloud from our first few weeks of texts and I returned the gift after two months of messages.
I love the extra analysis given to context of words used and times sent. Long live geeky love!
This is great! I would like to try and do the same thing with my text. Any insight on how you did it? Thanks
Hi JC – The first step is to export the text message data from your phone. I have an Android and used a free app called SMS Backup & Restore. This will export the data in XML format which you can then import into Excel to slice and dice. I used Wordle to create the word clouds and Excel / Tableau for the other visualizations. Hope that helps!
Congratulations on your anniversary. The analysis cute & nerdy. Surprising you guys didnt fight much! Could this be a reason your relationship culminated in marriage?
Haha, that is a good observation!
This is awesome! I have been wanting to do something similar for a long time.
Love your analysis and explanations. Hope your Home is a happy one 😉
Thanks Lina 🙂
I really liked this and can’t wait to read more! Reminds me of Amy Webb’s analysis of her online dating activities.
Thanks so much for the comparison! I absolutely LOVED her TED Talk.
What a fun post! Love the breakdowns and analysis. Love the “now I just agree with him” bit, haha.
Haha, I thought that finding was pretty funny too!
This was so fun to read and very informative! Thanks for sharing, Alice! Happyly anniversary!
Thanks Xixi! Glad you enjoyed it.
Very interesting article.
I may have discovered something too: it seems he loves “home” very much – his “home” usage has got much larger since 2008. He is either at home a lot, or wants to be home; my guess is the latter. And obviously he has influenced you on that too.
“Home” is much better than “work” 🙂
Yes, we both do like our home very much 🙂
How interesting!
Thanks!
Have you seen the Ted Talk with Amy Webb?….She is a fellow data person who hacked online dating…? Really fun to watch and might be something you would enjoy seeing if you haven’t already.
I love Amy Webb! I also really enjoy reading OkTrends, which is another blog on dating and analysis.