Anonymous wrote:I ghosted some friends because I was horribly depressed and didn't want to connect with real friends. Lately, it has been easier to be with those who don't want to get to know me. I wish I had the guts to tell my friends, but I'm ashamed of my depression.
Anonymous wrote:I basically ghosted a friend but remained cordial and polite and did talk to her if I ran into her at soccer practice or something.
This is what happened in our situation:
I have 3 kids, was working full-time, and came down with a serious health issue that required a very scary surgery. As a pick-me-up, we went out to dinner. At which point friend spent the whole time talking about how her SAHM, 1 child life was so hard and how depressed she was and just talked about Trump the whole time. I spent that evening consoling her, went home and felt worse than before I went. After that, I decided she was just bad energy. It didn’t help that she had offended or annoyed a bunch of other friends I liked better. We had met when our kids were toddlers so had had play dates, but since they were in different school districts I used that as kind of a way to not reach out ever again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was ghosted by a really good friend last year and it hurts a lot. I have no clue what I did, and would love the opportunity to hear her perspective, but I don't think that will ever happen.
Throughout our friendship, she ghosted some other people and I never really thought much of it (they weren't people I knew). Then, she cut out me and at least three other mutual friends at the same time. Oddly, this makes me feel better....she is a serial ghoster, which makes me think the problem is more her than me. Unfortunately I'll never know for sure.
Is she the type who tolerates too much, and later reacts over everything at once? The bolded sounds like a “final straw”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone suggested asking her what’s wrong? If she doesn’t answer, you can be bummed out, but she may have other stuff going on or maybe OP did something. If she was a good friend, why not try? Seems silly to write her off right away and make up a story about why she sucks.
Seems like a good idea!
People who ghost don’t want or aren’t capable of having that conversation. If she responds at all, it will be with some vague answer and OP will still be in the dark. I’d love to be wrong though.
+1 oh I just got very busy. It’s not you. Bye ...
Anonymous wrote:I ghosted some friends because I was horribly depressed and didn't want to connect with real friends. Lately, it has been easier to be with those who don't want to get to know me. I wish I had the guts to tell my friends, but I'm ashamed of my depression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was ghosted by a really good friend last year and it hurts a lot. I have no clue what I did, and would love the opportunity to hear her perspective, but I don't think that will ever happen.
Throughout our friendship, she ghosted some other people and I never really thought much of it (they weren't people I knew). Then, she cut out me and at least three other mutual friends at the same time. Oddly, this makes me feel better....she is a serial ghoster, which makes me think the problem is more her than me. Unfortunately I'll never know for sure.
Is she the type who tolerates too much, and later reacts over everything at once? The bolded sounds like a “final straw”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve done the ghosting. If I explained why I no longer wanted to be friends, it would be worse than the ghosting. There just is no nice way to put it.
Like OP, our kids were in school together and we lived in the same neighborhood; but then we moved and I used the opportunity to end the relationship.
To me, the mom was just too much. Her daughters behavior was the result of a dx. Except every time she tried to get the dx confirmed, the drs said it wasn’t. So she found another reason for her DDs behavior and chased another dx. Name brands were very important to her. If I didn’t know the same of the fancy resort she was vacationing at, she was dismissive. She stormed into school one day during a class event and proceed to call the other parents bullys. Except the parents were trying to protect their children from her DD. She was late and didn’t see the event and immediately sided with her DD.
There is no nice way to tell someone that their behavior is just something you don’t want to associate with. So I ghosted her. It’s not nice but it’s nicer than the alternative.
If I were that other mom, I'd want to know though. She may not even realize what she's doing and it would be a kindness to tell her. That said, I would never offer that up if you weren't asked.
Anonymous wrote:I find it freeing when people reveal who they really are. No need to worry over this. Why not put time, energy, love and care into other relationships with real, two-way street people?
She's honestly not worth another thought.
Anonymous wrote:Was ghosted by a close friend after I was raped. The friend, as best as I can tell, felt awkward around me. Very sad and based on my support group, not uncommon for sexual assault victims. Shocking and sad, but true.
Anonymous wrote:I was ghosted by a really good friend last year and it hurts a lot. I have no clue what I did, and would love the opportunity to hear her perspective, but I don't think that will ever happen.
Throughout our friendship, she ghosted some other people and I never really thought much of it (they weren't people I knew). Then, she cut out me and at least three other mutual friends at the same time. Oddly, this makes me feel better....she is a serial ghoster, which makes me think the problem is more her than me. Unfortunately I'll never know for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone suggested asking her what’s wrong? If she doesn’t answer, you can be bummed out, but she may have other stuff going on or maybe OP did something. If she was a good friend, why not try? Seems silly to write her off right away and make up a story about why she sucks.
Seems like a good idea!
People who ghost don’t want or aren’t capable of having that conversation. If she responds at all, it will be with some vague answer and OP will still be in the dark. I’d love to be wrong though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone suggested asking her what’s wrong? If she doesn’t answer, you can be bummed out, but she may have other stuff going on or maybe OP did something. If she was a good friend, why not try? Seems silly to write her off right away and make up a story about why she sucks.
Seems like a good idea!