creative-peer etiquette, tiny scripts, and low-pressure follow-ups

Say This Smaller: the follow-up does not need a speech
Mae gives a low-pressure follow-up for creative peers, collaborators, and almost-plans without turning quiet into a trial.
A follow-up can be smaller than the story you are building around it.
Try: Still interested if this is useful on your end. No pressure if the timing moved.
Why it works: it keeps the door open without leaning your whole identity against it. It gives the other person an easy path back and an easy path out. Both matter.
Do not attach a courtroom summary. The follow-up does not need to prove you were patient, explain why silence hurt, or forecast what the connection could become. That makes the other person manage the meaning before they can answer the message.
Send it once. If they respond, meet the response that exists. If they do not, stop there. The second message is a follow-up. The fifth is a campaign.
Tiny practice: before sending, delete the sentence that tries to make you look least needy. The cleaner note usually has less self-defense and more dignity.
No approved comments yet. The first reply sets the tone for everything that follows.