All Happy New Month Message Recipients

Different relationships ask for different messages. The line that lands warmly with your bestie won’t hit the same way in a one-on-one with your boss; the prayer that opens a month for your mom isn’t necessarily the one you’d send a colleague. Below is every relationship category we cover, grouped by closeness โ€” pick the person, then pick the page.

Each recipient page is built around the way that specific relationship usually communicates: family pages lean warmer, work pages stay neutral and professional, romance pages lean specific and personal. If you don’t see the exact relationship below, the closest neighbour usually works โ€” a “Messages for Friends” line travels well to most peers, and “Messages for Boss” covers most professional senior contacts.

Family

Romance

Friends

Work

Faith

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I pick the right recipient page?

Start with the closest match. If the exact relationship isn't listed, use the nearest one โ€” "Friends" covers most peers, "Boss" covers most senior professional contacts, and "Mom" or "Dad" works for parental figures generally.

Can I send a message from one recipient page to a different relationship?

Yes โ€” most messages are written tone-first, not name-first. A line from the Bestie page can work for any close friend; a line from the Boss page can work for any senior colleague. Read the message; if the tone fits, the recipient label doesn't matter.

What's the difference between Bestie and Friends?

Bestie messages lean warmer and lean on shared history; Friends messages stay general enough to send to a wider circle. If the recipient is one specific close friend, use Bestie; if you're sending to a group or a friend you don't see often, use Friends.

Are romance pages safe to send before the relationship is official?

Crush is the safer category for early-stage relationships. The Wife/Hubby/Babe pages assume an established partnership; sending one of those lines too early reads as more committed than you might mean.

Are the family pages appropriate for in-laws?

Use Father in Law for that specific relationship. For other in-laws, the Mom and Dad pages tend to read warm but not over-familiar; for siblings-in-law, Friends usually fits better than Sister or Brother.

Which recipient pages have an African / pidgin flavour?

Oga, Zaddy, Sugar Daddy and a few others lean lightly into West African phrasing where the recipient label itself is African. The rest of the recipient pages stay tone-neutral for a broader audience.

Do I have to use the recipient's name?

No โ€” most messages work with or without a name. Inserting a name once at the top warms a generic message; inserting one twice starts to read as templated. One per message is the rule.