# Should I wait for my ex to reach out first?

> By Benny Lichtenwalner, breakup coach and author of "How to Get Your Ex Back".
> Canonical: https://bennylichtenwalner.com/answers/should-i-wait-for-my-ex-to-reach-out-first/

**Short answer:** Wait only if the ball is genuinely in their court — you sent the last message or had the last real interaction. Then holding still is the move: to them it looks like strength, and their reach-out becomes real data. But if you've been silent since the breakup, don't wait forever — after no-contact, you send one calm re-entry message.

Short version: if you made the last move, yes — wait. If you've made no move at all since the breakup, no — waiting is not a plan.

I'm Benny Lichtenwalner, breakup coach and author of *How to Get Your Ex Back*, and this is one of the highest-frequency questions in my coaching inbox. Some version of "should I text, or should I hold?" comes up almost daily. My answer is almost always the same: **your ex moves next — you hold position until they act, or until real time has passed.** That one sentence covers about 80% of the situations people bring me.

Here's why it works, and exactly when it applies.

## Why does waiting for your ex work?

When you initiate, your ex can't move toward you — they can only react to you. Every text you send fills the gap they were about to feel. Waiting isn't passivity; it's the mechanism that makes their next move *mean something*. When your ex reaches out unprompted, that's real data: they chose to. That's the kind of initiative genuine re-attraction is built on, and it connects directly to [who actually holds the power after a breakup](/answers/who-holds-the-power-after-a-breakup/).

And here's the part most people miss, the reframe I give clients over and over: **your ex can't see you waiting.** No signal reaches their phone while you hold position. All they can observe is that you stopped reaching out — and from the outside, a person who stopped reaching out looks like a person busy building a life. Stillness reads as confidence and forward momentum. They literally cannot tell the difference. So the thing that feels weak from inside your head looks strong from theirs.

## When should I wait — and when should I reach out first?

This rule has boundaries. Get them wrong and you'll either chase or hide, and both lose.

| Situation | Wait, or reach out? |
|---|---|
| You sent the last message or made the last move | **Wait.** The ball is in their court. Let it sit. |
| You had a good interaction (banter, a smile, a reach-out from them) but no concrete next step | **Wait.** Don't push for plans. Let them fill the gap. |
| Post-no-contact texting has gone flat or medium-effort | **Wait**, then one light check-in after about a week. |
| You've been completely silent since the breakup and never re-initiated | **Reach out** — one calm [re-entry message](/guides/re-entry-message/) after your [no-contact period](/guides/no-contact-rule/). |
| A real logistical question exists and they've directly asked you | **Answer it.** Handle logistics like an adult, then go still again. |
| The breakup involved cheating, abuse, or they've clearly asked you to stop contacting them | **Neither.** Respect it and work on yourself. This page isn't for that situation. |

## What do I actually do while I wait?

Waiting is active. Here's the sequence I give clients:

1. **Hold position.** Don't text, don't manufacture a reason to interact, don't walk up to them first if you're in the same room. Let the last thing you did sit there and do its work.
2. **If they reach out, respond.** Engage warmly, keep it light, enjoy it. Then stop again and let them make the next move. You're not punishing anyone — you're letting them lead.
3. **If they give medium effort, let the conversation die naturally.** No rescue texts. About a week later, come back with something brief and low-stakes — "hey, how's your week going?" — then repeat the cycle.
4. **If time passes with nothing, keep living.** Gym, work, friends, sleep. Your life is the message. They either come toward it or they don't.
5. **When they keep coming toward you, don't change anything.** Whatever you're doing is working. Keep doing exactly that until the pattern is established.

This isn't a one-time pause. It's the operating rhythm of the whole re-attraction phase — they move, you respond, it rests, they move again. It's the behavioral flip side of [the Five Rules](/guides/five-rules/): instead of asking where you stand, you let their actions answer the question.

## What should I NOT do while waiting?

- **Don't text because the silence feels uncomfortable.** Your discomfort is not a reason. It's the exact urge this rule exists to override.
- **Don't manufacture an occasion.** No "happy Valentine's Day," no "saw this and thought of you." Your ex knows an excuse when they read one.
- **Don't try hard in the moments you do interact.** Effortful, over-eager behavior in person signals the same anxiety as a needy text. Relaxed beats impressive.
- **Don't read their silence as a closed door.** People often spend days or weeks deciding how they want to respond. Quiet is not the same as no. If the waiting itself is eating you alive, that's worth its own attention — I wrote about it in [why do I still feel desperate in no-contact](/answers/why-do-i-still-feel-desperate-in-no-contact/).

## What does this look like in practice?

Here's a composite — two clients merged, every identifying detail changed.

A client had finished no-contact, sent her re-entry message, and gotten a warm little exchange going — real questions, some banter. Then it went flat: one-line replies, nothing coming back. Her instinct was to rescue it — a follow-up, something funny, anything to force a spark. Then a genuinely bad week hit, and the urge changed shape: now she wanted to text him just to feel less alone. That's the hardest version of the urge, because it doesn't feel like chasing — it feels like comfort. She didn't send it. She let the conversation die and held.

Almost two weeks later he came back on his own — opened with a real question, stayed in it, kept the conversation moving without her carrying it. Somewhere in there he admitted the quiet had worked on him: he'd typed out messages to her and deleted them more than once, talking himself into it and back out of it. Because she'd held still instead of pushing, he had room to walk toward her — and he did. One needy message during that stretch would have told him she was sitting there waiting, and the pull would have collapsed on the spot.

That's the whole rule in one story: you don't make someone miss you by texting them. You make them miss you by stopping.

If you haven't made first contact yet and you're wondering what that message should even say, start with the full guide: [the re-entry message](/guides/re-entry-message/).