Ghosting is the reality of the modern dating world

MikelArteta

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You may not believe in ghosts, but they assuredly walk among us.

The ghosts I’m talking about don’t trudge around the attic in heavy chains or send your grandmother’s fine bone china flying across the room, however. These ghosts are a little more ordinary. You’ve probably even encountered one. The dating world is full of ghosts.

Ghosting is the scarily common dating practice where the person you’re seeing disappears from your life without warning or explanation. They simply stop responding to your calls, texts and emails.

One day, you’re sharing a root beer float and petting cute dogs in the park. The next day, poof! They’re gone. Vanished, like a ghost.

A few months ago, social media expert Terra Loire, 26, met someone on dating app Tinder. Everything was great, at first.

We went out a few times — just casual dates like brunch and drinks. (We talked) about life and bonded over our cats. He would text me all the time and was very thoughtful. He drove the emotional part of the relationship by being very forward with his feelings for me, which I appreciated.”

After a few weeks of schedules not aligning, they finally agreed on another date. He cancelled the day of, stating he was “tired.” He was genuinely apologetic and promised to set up a date for the following week. She never heard from him again.

“Ghosting is frustrating,” Loire says. “Especially when I work very hard to be honest and allow the other person opportunities to express their interest or disinterest in healthy ways. That should eliminate the need to ghost in the first place.”

Ghosting is a cowardly and disrespectful move, to be sure, but in a world where we’re accustomed to ending relationships with the literal push of a button (defriending, unfollowing, blocking), it makes sense. Ghosting is an easy and nonconfrontational way to get out of something that’s not working for you.

For the ghostee, it can be confusing, enraging and can even instill actual panic — did something happen to this person? Were they in an accident? Are they okay?

A friend recently asked me to check up on another friend of mine on social media to ensure he wasn’t dead. He had told her he would call her soon to plan another date and she never heard from him again. According to recent Facebook photos of him drinking with friends, he was alive and well. He had simply ghosted.

Playwright Graham Isador, 27, has been both ghoster and ghostee.

After meeting an interesting and beautiful woman in another city, they kept in touch. It became clear to Isador after a return visit that they had very different expectations of the relationship.

Back in Toronto, he took longer to respond to her texts and was always “busy” when the phone rang.

“I didn’t handle that thing well,” Isador admits. “I avoided conflict. I let things drift in that ‘what happened’ scenario that is intensely frustrating. When you don’t know what happened, it’s hard to get closure.

“I was trying to think of a comparison and the best thing I came up with is: pulling the band-aid off. Pulling it off quickly is going to hurt a bit. But if the alternative is leaving it on until the band-aid grows gross and dirty and eventually falls off on its own? It’s pretty clear what to choose. I owe that girl an apology, but I think it is too late to get in touch now.”

Isador likely won’t make the same mistake twice, considering what followed.

“The next girl I got involved with ended up ghosting on me. So, you know, enjoy the schadenfreude.”
 

HopeKillCure

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2016 the Summer of the Ghost.

The game is different now, people just quit easier. Everything needs to be gratifying 24/7 or else people gonna dip. Social media and the internet makes it so that there's so much stimulation you can find, a lot of people in this generation gonna die alone. Having a lot of options is a gift and a curse, the more choices you think you have, the harder it is to choose just 1 thing. People's perceived options is why ghosting so popular.


The ugliest woman on a dating app is gonna have at least 100 messages in her inbox, mad perceived options, until they too old to realize that 98% of those messages from dudes that have no intention of being in a long term relationship/ marrying them.
 
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Ol’Otis

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Ghosting is the scarily common dating practice where the person you’re seeing disappears from your life without warning or explanation. They simply stop responding to your calls, texts and emails.
i used to do this in my early 20s

its time to start doing it again :ehh::wow:
 

General Mills

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I ghost:yeshrug:

The older i get the more selfish and self centered i become :manny:

I figured out i dont owe a a girl im casually dating anything. If we don't have a committed relationship then she is always in danger of getting the:camby:

I dont owe closure or even a text. If i give it then take it. If not then k.i.m

I dont feel obligated to explain anything. Now if we progress past a casual stage then i will adapt.
 

MrPentatonic

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seems like alot of work dodging someone, much easier just to say...not interested :yeshrug:

(its also kind of passive aggressive and bytchmade)

nah its effortless. Block and delete takes like 5 seconds.

Not out of maliciousness, but out of generally not giving a fukk & convenience. You don't owe nobody no explanation. Both men & women.
 

Black Cobain

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I did/do both, whenever someone I didn't wanna talk to anymore sent me a message, I wouldn't even open it..took me a long time to even delete the message
 

Marezzy

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I've been doing that for years before it had a name. Chicks start talking crazy or getting so comfortable that she just becomes inconsiderate. I address it twice after I address it a third time I disappear. Your not gonna learn.
 
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Last chick I dated did this to me. Didn't feel good.

I see people saying that chicks don't owe you anything and vice versa. I disagree. Not saying that it's not necessrary at times but I believe there are perfectly reasonable, straightforward ways of hinting to someone your desire to disengage.

But it's just a lot easier to be self-centred and be an a$$hole at the same time. It is not hard at all. Also I bet most fo the chicks who do this have had it done to them at some point.

It's a lot easier to justify doing this if it's happened to you and you didn't like it, and you are feeling a bit vindictive. If people on the whole were more courteous and respectful life would be easier to navigate.
 

re'up

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I have friends that do this.....To me, it's just some bytch made shyt, I don't communicate like a hoe. I'm not passive aggressive or vindictive, all mad due to some relationship shyt...It's really weak to me. Says a lot about character. Of course, it's happened to me, one way or another, though I doubt any of those doors are closed, it's just mostly timing. However, I don't really deal with this.... communicate well, don't overtext, carry yourself a certain way, and you won't have to 'ghost' people, I don't even know why I would do that to someone.....It's a byproduct of text based communication, but it's intensified by the hyper accessible Tinder trends.
 
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