Anonymous
Post 12/09/2025 06:53     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

Even though we disagree I still get where you are coming from and I understand your opinion (and the end of your reply made me laugh out loud). But you notice how you totally disregard and disrespect mine and other PPs that agree with the various reasons for ghosting someone? Thank you for proving the point. Why confront someone who refuses to understand and only sees their own perspective? What is to be gained from that?

With an increasing mental health crisis in the US, I think it is better to lower the temperature and let everyone involved have a moment of silence. What is wrong with that? Are people just entitled to your time just because they are ready to engage you?


You make a lot of assumptions, as evidenced in your reply. It's not disrespectful to have a different position. If you want to take that personally, you can. I am one of the pp's saying ghosting could be an acceptable strategy to escape violence or abuse. That's not the same as assuming your friend/partner/person you're in relationship to "can't handle" hearing some mysterious reason you're not willing to articulate. It doesn't need to be a confrontation unless you're confrontational. You can simple tell someone "Larla, I've really enjoyed our time together, but this relationship isn't what I need in my life right now. I wish you the best."

Despite being somewhat confrontational in your reply, I'd guess (based on not much) that you're actually conflict averse/avoidant, like most people who choose ghosting as a means of ending relationships/connections. To justify it, most people project the responsibility onto the other party. "Larla couldn't handle the truth, so I never told her." That's cowardice, and I stand by my point.

Whether or not people are "entitled to your time", self-respect says YOU'RE entitled to your time and your position. Communicating like an adult is for YOU. far more than the other party.

"You're chickenshit. You're going to use what happened today as an excuse to give up."


So verbal communication is the only form of communication that exists? Ghosting can be considered a new communication mechanism amongst other nonverbal modes. Like when someone angrily stares at you from a distance with a shirt that has FAFO on it. Is that a good time to approach and converse with them like an adult?

Many of us have been ghosted at least once in our lifetime (yeah including me and my conflict averse/avoidant self). When it happens, you read the room and reflect. Ok maybe I offended Larla by sliding into her husband’s DMs…or maybe she is going through something let me back off from being a pushy, overbearing “friend” and give her a chance to breathe and handle her divorce proceedings. If I check in with her later and she doesn’t respond, maybe she doesn’t want to be bothered…hmmm maybe because I f’d her husband?

I write this in jest because, 9 out of 10 times, we all have a pretty good idea why that person ghosted unless you have zero self awareness or you don’t know the person well enough. Please keep it real.

Sometimes their reason for disappearing has nothing to do with us or anything we did. Sometimes people are just prioritizing the things (like peace, if that’s ok) and the people that are number one in their lives. But because some people tend to feel entitled to have backstage access into the lives of others as a condition of the relationship, there is disappointment when they are suddenly unavailable. I get the hurt that comes from that, but when all is said and done I have to preserve and protect myself, period.



Maybe you'd "have to preserve and protect" yourself less if you were less of a gobshite? In your example, yes, there's an obvious wrong. But lots of people ghost just because they don't vibe or got bored or some other low-stakes reason. There's a fair bit of confusion left behind when one's ghosted (unless, you know, you're a total gobshite). There's also a lack of self-respect on the part of the ghoster. No, you don't need to confront someone who has blatantly wronged you, and this may fall under the "ghosting is okay in cases of abuse/danger" exception. But it's really okay to just say you're not feeling it, or that a relationship isn't meeting your needs anymore. When people ghost, they disrespect that part of themselves that deserves to be heard and validated, if only internally, by standing up for their own reality. This is why I called it cowardice.

You frame it as other people's entitlement to backstage access. I would ask why you put on such a show in your relationships that reality is kept behind-the-scenes in the first place. Kinda sounds like you're "preserving and protecting" a character, a mask, the illusion you're putting on... Kinda sounds like you don't actually want to be understood, which tracks. Sure, when ghosted, the ghostee is left little choice but to reflect and guess, which is a large part of where the pain comes from. The ghoster didn't respect them enough to tell them the truth. Thing is, they didn't respect themselves enough to tell the truth either, and I think, when you really break it down, that's the greater slight.
Anonymous
Post 12/09/2025 05:59     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Ghosting gets a bad wrap. Sometimes ghosting can be a good thing. A way to set boundaries when someone does really disrespectful. I love Oprah’s take on the matter: https://youtu.be/5B0waKRB0ag?si=VLI-sOPw3KVw_tqY
Anonymous
Post 12/09/2025 05:38     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

I think not being able to handle drama is leading people to be more covert and also be more dramatic. If you cant have difficult conversations without a lot of drama then it's silly to be in any relationship. It either says you were in a relationship that was very unhealthy for whatever reason you chose poorly on or that you have a difficult time talking about hard things and arent a good partner for anyone. It's unhealthy to ghost for everyone when you've been in a relationship that you respected each other for some time.
Anonymous
Post 12/09/2025 05:33     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

Even though we disagree I still get where you are coming from and I understand your opinion (and the end of your reply made me laugh out loud). But you notice how you totally disregard and disrespect mine and other PPs that agree with the various reasons for ghosting someone? Thank you for proving the point. Why confront someone who refuses to understand and only sees their own perspective? What is to be gained from that?

With an increasing mental health crisis in the US, I think it is better to lower the temperature and let everyone involved have a moment of silence. What is wrong with that? Are people just entitled to your time just because they are ready to engage you?


You make a lot of assumptions, as evidenced in your reply. It's not disrespectful to have a different position. If you want to take that personally, you can. I am one of the pp's saying ghosting could be an acceptable strategy to escape violence or abuse. That's not the same as assuming your friend/partner/person you're in relationship to "can't handle" hearing some mysterious reason you're not willing to articulate. It doesn't need to be a confrontation unless you're confrontational. You can simple tell someone "Larla, I've really enjoyed our time together, but this relationship isn't what I need in my life right now. I wish you the best."

Despite being somewhat confrontational in your reply, I'd guess (based on not much) that you're actually conflict averse/avoidant, like most people who choose ghosting as a means of ending relationships/connections. To justify it, most people project the responsibility onto the other party. "Larla couldn't handle the truth, so I never told her." That's cowardice, and I stand by my point.

Whether or not people are "entitled to your time", self-respect says YOU'RE entitled to your time and your position. Communicating like an adult is for YOU. far more than the other party.

"You're chickenshit. You're going to use what happened today as an excuse to give up."


This. It allows the person to stop thinking about you. You don't need to go into an hour long discussion why. It just shows some minimal respect for the time they invested into the relationship.
Anonymous
Post 12/09/2025 01:05     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

DP. You're the exact kind of hysterical, aggressive person who necessitates ghosting. No one owes it to you to deal with your histrionics and name calling.


Aww, lil buddy... The "histrionics" is a movie quote from the same movie quoted by the pp, and calling an action cowardly isn't "name calling". Please stick to the rivers and the lakes that you're used to. This game is not for you.

^^Again, this right here is why people ghost you. Life's too short to trade words with a prickly egomaniac.
Anonymous
Post 12/09/2025 00:44     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

It is ok to ghost casual friendships in which the person is overly needy and demanding. For example, they get drunk every time we go out, use the whole time to complain about their life and how every guy they date is awful without looking in the mirror, are very entitled and mean to others, and never want to listen about your life and just talk about themselves like you are a free therapist.
Anonymous
Post 12/08/2025 22:15     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

Even though we disagree I still get where you are coming from and I understand your opinion (and the end of your reply made me laugh out loud). But you notice how you totally disregard and disrespect mine and other PPs that agree with the various reasons for ghosting someone? Thank you for proving the point. Why confront someone who refuses to understand and only sees their own perspective? What is to be gained from that?

With an increasing mental health crisis in the US, I think it is better to lower the temperature and let everyone involved have a moment of silence. What is wrong with that? Are people just entitled to your time just because they are ready to engage you?


You make a lot of assumptions, as evidenced in your reply. It's not disrespectful to have a different position. If you want to take that personally, you can. I am one of the pp's saying ghosting could be an acceptable strategy to escape violence or abuse. That's not the same as assuming your friend/partner/person you're in relationship to "can't handle" hearing some mysterious reason you're not willing to articulate. It doesn't need to be a confrontation unless you're confrontational. You can simple tell someone "Larla, I've really enjoyed our time together, but this relationship isn't what I need in my life right now. I wish you the best."

Despite being somewhat confrontational in your reply, I'd guess (based on not much) that you're actually conflict averse/avoidant, like most people who choose ghosting as a means of ending relationships/connections. To justify it, most people project the responsibility onto the other party. "Larla couldn't handle the truth, so I never told her." That's cowardice, and I stand by my point.

Whether or not people are "entitled to your time", self-respect says YOU'RE entitled to your time and your position. Communicating like an adult is for YOU. far more than the other party.

"You're chickenshit. You're going to use what happened today as an excuse to give up."


So verbal communication is the only form of communication that exists? Ghosting can be considered a new communication mechanism amongst other nonverbal modes. Like when someone angrily stares at you from a distance with a shirt that has FAFO on it. Is that a good time to approach and converse with them like an adult?

Many of us have been ghosted at least once in our lifetime (yeah including me and my conflict averse/avoidant self). When it happens, you read the room and reflect. Ok maybe I offended Larla by sliding into her husband’s DMs…or maybe she is going through something let me back off from being a pushy, overbearing “friend” and give her a chance to breathe and handle her divorce proceedings. If I check in with her later and she doesn’t respond, maybe she doesn’t want to be bothered…hmmm maybe because I f’d her husband?

I write this in jest because, 9 out of 10 times, we all have a pretty good idea why that person ghosted unless you have zero self awareness or you don’t know the person well enough. Please keep it real.

Sometimes their reason for disappearing has nothing to do with us or anything we did. Sometimes people are just prioritizing the things (like peace, if that’s ok) and the people that are number one in their lives. But because some people tend to feel entitled to have backstage access into the lives of others as a condition of the relationship, there is disappointment when they are suddenly unavailable. I get the hurt that comes from that, but when all is said and done I have to preserve and protect myself, period.


Anonymous
Post 12/08/2025 09:41     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

DP. You're the exact kind of hysterical, aggressive person who necessitates ghosting. No one owes it to you to deal with your histrionics and name calling.


Aww, lil buddy... The "histrionics" is a movie quote from the same movie quoted by the pp, and calling an action cowardly isn't "name calling". Please stick to the rivers and the lakes that you're used to. This game is not for you.
Anonymous
Post 12/08/2025 09:39     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

Even though we disagree I still get where you are coming from and I understand your opinion (and the end of your reply made me laugh out loud). But you notice how you totally disregard and disrespect mine and other PPs that agree with the various reasons for ghosting someone? Thank you for proving the point. Why confront someone who refuses to understand and only sees their own perspective? What is to be gained from that?

With an increasing mental health crisis in the US, I think it is better to lower the temperature and let everyone involved have a moment of silence. What is wrong with that? Are people just entitled to your time just because they are ready to engage you?


Checking in from the mental health field in to say ghosting for reasons of avoiding fleeting discomfort or awkwardness is messed up and dysfunctional.

How convenient for clients to be embroiled in toxicity and turmoil so their mental health professionals can swipe their HSA card quite swiftly. Something tells me that their bank account isn’t messed up and dysfunctional. And then we wonder why people turn to AI for therapy.


DP. I'd suggest therapy for your obvious grudge, but you wouldn't do it. Maybe waste some water talking to the clankers about it? You need help.
Anonymous
Post 12/08/2025 09:38     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

Even though we disagree I still get where you are coming from and I understand your opinion (and the end of your reply made me laugh out loud). But you notice how you totally disregard and disrespect mine and other PPs that agree with the various reasons for ghosting someone? Thank you for proving the point. Why confront someone who refuses to understand and only sees their own perspective? What is to be gained from that?

With an increasing mental health crisis in the US, I think it is better to lower the temperature and let everyone involved have a moment of silence. What is wrong with that? Are people just entitled to your time just because they are ready to engage you?


You make a lot of assumptions, as evidenced in your reply. It's not disrespectful to have a different position. If you want to take that personally, you can. I am one of the pp's saying ghosting could be an acceptable strategy to escape violence or abuse. That's not the same as assuming your friend/partner/person you're in relationship to "can't handle" hearing some mysterious reason you're not willing to articulate. It doesn't need to be a confrontation unless you're confrontational. You can simple tell someone "Larla, I've really enjoyed our time together, but this relationship isn't what I need in my life right now. I wish you the best."

Despite being somewhat confrontational in your reply, I'd guess (based on not much) that you're actually conflict averse/avoidant, like most people who choose ghosting as a means of ending relationships/connections. To justify it, most people project the responsibility onto the other party. "Larla couldn't handle the truth, so I never told her." That's cowardice, and I stand by my point.

Whether or not people are "entitled to your time", self-respect says YOU'RE entitled to your time and your position. Communicating like an adult is for YOU. far more than the other party.

"You're chickenshit. You're going to use what happened today as an excuse to give up."
Anonymous
Post 12/08/2025 07:26     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Abuse, unsafe situations.

Otherwise it's cruel and cowardly and making society worse.


Agreed. Ghosting is a dick move, and should be used as a last resort when escaping a dangerous situation.


+1.
Anonymous
Post 12/08/2025 00:23     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

Even though we disagree I still get where you are coming from and I understand your opinion (and the end of your reply made me laugh out loud). But you notice how you totally disregard and disrespect mine and other PPs that agree with the various reasons for ghosting someone? Thank you for proving the point. Why confront someone who refuses to understand and only sees their own perspective? What is to be gained from that?

With an increasing mental health crisis in the US, I think it is better to lower the temperature and let everyone involved have a moment of silence. What is wrong with that? Are people just entitled to your time just because they are ready to engage you?


Checking in from the mental health field in to say ghosting for reasons of avoiding fleeting discomfort or awkwardness is messed up and dysfunctional.

How convenient for clients to be embroiled in toxicity and turmoil so their mental health professionals can swipe their HSA card quite swiftly. Something tells me that their bank account isn’t messed up and dysfunctional. And then we wonder why people turn to AI for therapy.
Anonymous
Post 12/07/2025 23:41     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Yes. In adult relationships you don’t need to explain to someone that cheating is bad. See you never, bye
Anonymous
Post 12/07/2025 23:39     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Really, anytime you need to move on.
Anonymous
Post 12/07/2025 23:38     Subject: Is it ever ok to ghost?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No it is not! I got ghosted back in February by someone who I had been friends with for 16 years! We even lived together for three years in college. Sometimes, I still wonder what the f*** happened. I wish she had told me why she doesn't want to be friends anymore. I'd rather hear harsh words than be left wondering.


Then you can handle the truth. Tom Cruise and so many others cannot. And quite frankly when you know you don’t want to move forward with the person what is the point of airing it out and resolving it? Is everything going to just go back to old times? Think about that…Maybe for them, but not for you…you will most likely remain bothered by whatever it is. Some things are better left unsaid. Sounds dysfunctional, but true in some cases.


Nope. Still cowardly. Blaming other people's alleged inability to "handle the truth" for your inability to stand ten down and speak it is immature af.

(and "you're goddamn right I did!!!")

DP. You're the exact kind of hysterical, aggressive person who necessitates ghosting. No one owes it to you to deal with your histrionics and name calling.


Wow not the person you are replying to but thank you for this glimpse into the janky reality of a foster-I genuinely pity you. Cheers!

I don't know what a "foster" is in that context, but I'd ghost you too.