avatarTim Dahi

Summary

The article discusses the positive aspects of being ghosted, emphasizing that it can be a blessing in disguise, as it may indicate the avoidance of a relationship with someone who has problematic personality traits or emotional issues.

Abstract

The article "Simple Things To Be Grateful For When You’ve Been Ghosted" provides a perspective on the upside of being ghosted, suggesting that it can be a fortunate escape from potential emotional turmoil. It explains that ghosting, while initially painful, can save one from a relationship with an individual high in dark triad traits such as narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy. The piece also points out that ghosting reflects the ghoster's emotional immaturity and inability to handle serious conversations about relationships. It highlights that ghosting often stems from the ghoster's unresolved issues rather than any fault of the victim. The article encourages self-kindness and connection with people who value and respect you, suggesting that it is an opportunity to find a supportive community and to avoid unnecessary frustration and pain from a one-sided relationship.

Opinions

  • Ghosting can be a sign that one has avoided a relationship with someone who is self-centered, lacks compassion, and has low empathy.
  • It is better to not be in a relationship with someone who is emotionally immature and incapable of honest communication about the relationship's status.
  • Being ghosted can be seen as an escape from the potential frustrations and pains of a relationship with someone who does not prioritize you.
  • Individuals with anxious or avoidant attachment styles are more likely to ghost, indicating that their behavior is rooted in their own emotional challenges.
  • The experience of being ghosted should not lead to self-doubt or feelings of disrespect, as it is a reflection of the ghoster's personality and attachment issues, not the victim's worth.
  • It is important to seek out relationships with people who appreciate and value you, creating a sense of community and safety.

Simple Things To Be Grateful For When You’ve Been Ghosted

Most times it’s about their unresolved, deep-rooted issues and not really about you.

Photo by Sydney Sims on Unsplash

In the old days, people went for a pack of cigarettes and just never returned. That was ghosting then.

Nowadays we also think of the phenomenon in digital terms as in not answering texts, email, or taking calls. Modern ghosters have evolved the ability to simply disappear from a relationship into the thin air of cyberspace.

This cowardly and cruel method of social rejection can leave the person ghosted in actual pain, frustration, and anger. A victim feels dehumanized, and humiliated. The implication that one wasn’t considered deserving of an explanation can also leave one feeling undervalued. But there’s a bright side.

Wait, there’s a bright side?

Photo by Gus Ruballo on Unsplash

In the long run:

  1. You have been spared a relationship with someone probably high in the dark triad traits. These are people who tend to be self-centered, less compassionate, and less emphatic.
  2. Further hassles of being in a relationship with an emotionally immature person are no longer yours to suffer. This is someone who probably thinks abandoning you in this manner is a favor because they are sparing you the pain of a drawn-out breakup. Only the emotionally immature with little depth of understanding or empathy can think this way. Otherwise, how can they not see the pain and humiliation their victim would likely suffer after being ghosted.
  3. You no longer need to bear the frustration of having to keep up a relationship with someone who obviously does not regard you as a priority. They may be distracted with other (potential) partners, other more important activities or they were just not into you which, according to this BuzzFeed survey, is the reason 81% of participants gave for why they ghosted.
  4. You are free of someone incapable of having a serious conversation about the relationship’s future or lack of, which would require honesty about how they really feel. And one group most likely to avoid those situations and therefore, more likely to ghost are people with particular attachment issues that stem from childhood. Specifically anxious attachment and avoidant attachment styles. This is not to say that people with these attachment styles cant have relationships, they can, and under the right circumstance, they can even alter their behavior. However, that is no longer your problem.
Photo by Owen Beard on Unsplash

Bottomline

Being rejected this way can be lead to understandable sadness, feelings of being disrespected, and engender feelings of self-doubt. Definitely, no relationship, however brief, should have to end without at least a talk. Unfortunately, a ghoster is of the immature, inconsiderate, emotionally unavailable kind. So it is best to remember it is more about them than it is about you. You are not to blame for their dark personality types or their insecure attachment styles.

Be kind to yourself because there is probably no way you could have known. Take the time to connect with people who really appreciate you for a change. People who give you a sense of community with whom you feel safe and valued.

Photo by Helena Lopes on Unsplash
Relationship Advice
Life Lessons
Ghosting
Self Care
Love And Dating
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