this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2025
16 points (78.6% liked)

Off My Chest

1086 readers
59 users here now

RULES:


I am looking for mods!


1. The "good" part of our community means we are pro-empathy and anti-harassment. However, we don't intend to make this a "safe space" where everyone has to be a saint. Sh*t happens, and life is messy. That's why we get things off our chests.

2. Bigotry is not allowed. That includes racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, xenophobia, and religiophobia. (If you want to vent about religion, that's fine; but religion is not inherently evil.)

3. Frustrated, venting, or angry posts are still welcome.

4. Posts and comments that bait, threaten, or incite harassment are not allowed.

5. If anyone offers mental, medical, or professional advice here, please remember to take it with a grain of salt. Seek out real professionals if needed.

6. Please put NSFW behind NSFW tags.


founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I've always thought ghosting was a terrible thing to do to someone, and now that I've experienced it for the first time I know for sure how fucked up it is.

We went on multiple dates and everything was going great (or was it? that's the type of doubt ghosting puts in your head), we had no issues in person or in text, but more than no issues we seemed to have a lot of chemistry and things in common. Then one day she never texted me back again. I spend a fucking week agonizing over it. Will she text me back? Maybe she's just busy! (Too busy to take 30s from her week to say "Hey, I'm a bit busy and don't feel like texting. I'll let you know when I have time"?) Should I text her again or is it better to wait? I did text her once more - a few days after, when I saw something that I wanted to share with her and thought it was a good opportunity to restart the conversation, give her another chance to reply. She never responded.

I've seen so many excuses for it, and none of them are valid. Maybe two:

  1. You are in an actively abusive relationship and so you just disappear.

  2. You are in a comma.

No other reason justifies it. Afraid the other person won't take it well? You can still block them afterwards and go no contact, but that's not ghosting anymore because you actually gave them closure. I doubt any psycho out there is thinking "damn, they ghosted me. I guess they really mean it then, as opposed to if they just told me they're not interested anymore". Some people say "I don't owe anyone anything" - yeah, neither does anyone else, but we still hold doors for strangers because it's the decent fucking thing to do, jackass. Just like it's basic fucking curtsy to tell someone when you're no longer interested in talking to them instead of leaving them to figure it out.

One way or another, I have to deal with the rejection. The difference is that if I get ghosted then I also have to go through a horrible period of agony before dealing with the rejection (how long varies case by case), and in the end there's also humiliation on top. Humiliation that comes from the realization that while I was agonizing over her, she had probably already forgotten me and moved on. It's humiliating and makes it me feel like trash.

And it's fucking poisonous as well. At least if the connection was short lived and all positive, because there's no negative to grab on to. All my memories of the situation are positive. Or at least they seemed that way to me, but this is the kind of poisonous toxic doubt that ghosting leaves you in. Because I can't think of any negatives, now I'm paranoid about what I might have said or done, and whenever I go on another date I'll be hyper-aware and super self conscious about everything I do and say. I won't be able to fully relax and be myself, and if it happens again I might just ended shielding myself and become incapable of making connections out of a fear it will keep happening.

The only certainties I have is that the last week was agony, and now I'll carry the scar with me for at least the next few dates I go on. For some people these periods of time are much longer.

And all this could have been solved with a simple "Hey, I'm sorry but I'm not really interested in pursing this anymore, so I want to end things here." If she had done that, I could have gone through the grieving period a week ago and completely skipped the agony and trust issues.

But do you know what the real sad thing is? Who the real fucking loser is? Me. Because if tomorrow she messaged be with some bullshit excuse and asked me to meet again, I'd probably agree to it in a heart beat and shove the memories of this past week deep down, along with all feelings relating to it.

Fuck ghosts.

top 4 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] Aedis@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I just want to pop in here and say, try putting yourself in her shoes. Depending on where you live rejecting someone as a woman can be damn near dangerous. Maybe you don't think you'd react negatively to it, and maybe you won't. Congrats on being someone decent. But a woman has to go through this every time and sometimes it's fucking scary. So maybe they're scarred by having had one too many rejections gone bad. Or maybe there was just one really bad one. I get that you're angry and hurt and pissed. But in these cases it's almost never the person getting ghosted who didn't deserve closure, it's the person doing the ghosting that wants to avoid the confrontation. As for you? Ghosting is rejection. One way or another. We deal with it, we get angry, we vent, and we move on. We should never take it out on someone else by the way.

Always put yourself in someone else's shoes when you can't understand their actions.

PS I speak from personal experience, your mileage might vary.

[–] jerakor@startrek.website 2 points 1 week ago

It can be scary for anyone regardless of gender. I've twice had really bad reactions, once life threatening, after a break up and I'm a big man.

That doesn't mean anyone is wrong for ghosting or getting ghosted. I just want to highlight that trying to focus on gender as if it matters is the same as focusing on race or size or religion. You shouldn't say that a black person should expect to get ghosted because some people have had bad experiences with black people.

Look maybe this person is terrible and deserved to be ghosted. Maybe the other person was awful and ghosted them to hurt them. Maybe it was just an unfortunate reaction due to personal stress. But no one deserves to be told their gender makes them just need to just suck it up and expect it. Having to deal with the stress and self doubt that comes from having someone who you thought was a part of your life decide to cut you out instantly, it sucks.

[–] jerakor@startrek.website 3 points 1 week ago

This is a fantastic reason to talk to a therapist.

You won't ever really trust your friends or family who say you did nothing wrong. Other folks will try to explain it away but it doesn't help either. Most people dealt with this and it sucks and when it hits you when you are vulnerable it can hurt for a long time.

Focus on who you are and who you want to be and building your confidence. Focus on boundary setting and clear communication with people in general. These are skills it sounds like you struggle with based off the problems you are stressing about.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 1 week ago

It may not be intentional ghosting.... It's ghosting, but not with the thought of "I'm going to ghost them"

Your partner could be busy with other conversations and your not the priority

Your partner might like your message, and might give it a low effort response, but they don't want to get dragged into a conversation

You often see this on dating apps: a bunch of back and forth messages and suddenly nothing, for seemingly no reason. Having seen this multiple times from both sides: they found their date/hookup, someone they like more started to talk to them, or they were just chatting out of boredom and got busy.