Ghosting: 13 Subtle Red Flags in Last Messages You Missed

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
8 min read

This article is available in French only.

Ghosting: 13 Subtle Red Flags in Last Messages You Missed

Quick Overview

Ghosting, the sudden and unexplained disappearance of someone you've been communicating with, often leaves feelings of confusion and pain. In retrospect, our text conversations are often full of subtle cues, frequently overlooked at the time, that foreshadowed this withdrawal. These signals, ranging from a decrease in message frequency to evasive replies, are the precursors to disengagement, a form of "digital stonewalling" that precedes the definitive silence.

Linguistic Cues in Messages

Analyzing past exchanges can be a painful but illuminating exercise. Here are 13 signals, often present in messages preceding ghosting, that can help you understand what happened—not to blame yourself, but to learn to identify them in the future.

  • Drastic Decrease in Message Frequency:
  • Before: "Good morning my love, how are you this morning? I slept so well thinking of you! 😊"* After: "Hi." or No message at all for hours, then a terse reply.*
  • Increasingly Short and Generic Replies:
  • Before: "Yes, it was a great idea to go to the Indian restaurant last night, I loved our discussion about travel and your future plans!"* After: "Ok.", "Seen.", "Got it."*
  • Absence of Questions About Your Life or Activities:
  • Before: "So, how was your important meeting? I hope it went well!"* After: You recount your day, the person replies about a different topic or asks no follow-up questions.*
  • Avoidance of Future Topics or Shared Plans:
  • Before: "We could go for that hike next month? And for summer vacation, what were you thinking?"* After: "For the hike, we'll see...", "I'll let you know about next week."* (without ever following through)
  • Increasing and Unjustified Delays in Replies:
  • Before: Reply within the hour, sometimes within minutes.* After: Reply 8h, 12h, or even 24h later, with no clear explanation or apology.*
  • Vague or Recurring Justifications for Unavailability:
  • Before: "Sorry, I was in a meeting, I'll call you back as soon as I'm out."* After: "I was swamped.", "Too much going on right now.", "Tired."* (with no further details or offer to reschedule)
  • Use of Impersonal or Formal Language:
  • Before: "Kisses", "Lots of love", "My dear"* After: "Sincerely", "Take care.", "All the best."* (in an inappropriate context)
  • Disappearance of Affectionate Nicknames or Personal Emojis:
  • Before: "Hey sweetie! ❤️"* After: "Hi [First Name]"* (without emojis or with generic emojis like a thumbs-up)
  • Message of "Pause" or "Need for Space" Not Followed by Dialogue:
  • Example: "I need some time for myself right now."* (and the dialogue stops there, with no follow-up or attempt to understand what it means for the relationship)
  • Repeated Cancellation of Plans Without Alternative Suggestions:
  • Before: "I can't tonight, but I'm free Thursday or Friday, which do you prefer?"* After: "I can't tonight, sorry."* (full stop, with no attempt to reschedule)
  • Communication Becomes Solely Utilitarian or Logistical:
  • Before: Exchanges on various topics, personal matters, emotions.* After: "Did you pick up your things?", "Can you send me the document back?"* (no more intimate or personal exchanges)
  • Phrases That Close the Conversation Without Opening to a Follow-up:
  • Before: "Can't wait to see you!", "Let's talk soon!"* After: "Have a good evening.", "See you around, maybe.", "That was nice."* (without "when" or "where")
  • Lack of Reaction to Important or Emotional Messages:
  • You: "I'm feeling a bit lonely right now, I would have liked to talk to you."* The person: No reply, or a reply on a completely different subject.*

    Interpretation

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    Why did they disappear?

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    These signals, taken in isolation, might seem innocuous. We all have periods of stress, unavailability, or moments when we're less talkative. However, when several of these markers appear simultaneously or persistently, they paint a clear picture: a gradual disengagement from the relationship.

    From a CBT perspective, these behaviors can be interpreted as a form of "cognitive and behavioral disengagement." The person begins to reduce their communication efforts, their thoughts about the relationship, and their actions to maintain it. It's an avoidance strategy, often unconscious at first, to escape potential conflict, emotional confrontation, or intimacy that they no longer desire or can no longer manage.

    John Gottman's work on the "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" in relationships is particularly relevant here. Ghosting can be seen as an extrême form of "stonewalling" (the avoidance of communication and emotional withdrawal), one of the most reliable predictors of relationship breakdown. A 2022 study, moreover, showed that "stonewalling," or ceasing to respond and interact, is one of the most destructive behaviors for the longevity of a relationship, a concept that strongly resonates with ghosting.

    For the person who has been ghosted, these previously unnoticed signals can, in retrospect, confirm the feeling of having been "left in the lurch." The human brain naturally seeks to make sense of events, and identifying these cues can, paradoxically, aid the grieving and understanding process, even if the pain persists. Recent work in Schema Therapy, such as the research by Young and his colleagues (2023) on the impact of abandonment and defectiveness schemas, highlights how much ghosting can reactivate deep wounds, making the understanding of these signals all the more crucial for healing.

    New perspectives on attachment theory (Bowlby, 2024) suggest that ghosting is often a manifestation of an avoidant attachment style in the "ghoster," seeking to flee conflict or emotional intimacy, while the person who has been ghosted, if they have an anxious attachment, may find themselves caught in a cycle of self-questioning and seeking validation.

    Analyze Your Conversations

    What to Do When Recognizing These Signals (In Retrospect)?

    If you recognize these signals in past conversations, it's essential to adopt a compassionate approach toward yourself.

  • Validate Your Emotions: It's normal to feel sadness, anger, confusion, or disappointment. Acknowledge these emotions without judgment.
  • Stop Self-Blame: Ghosting is a behavior that is the responsibility of the person who practices it. It is not your fault. These signals were not necessarily clear or interpretable at the time. No one is an expert at real-time ghosting detection.
  • Accept the Lack of Closure: One of the major difficulties of ghosting is the absence of explanation. It is crucial to accept that you may never get a clear answer. The meaning you give to the situation must come from you, not from the other person.
  • Focus on Your Well-being: Engage in activities that make you feel good, surround yourself with supportive people. Take care of your body and mind.
  • Set Clear Boundaries for the Future: This experience can help you identify what you expect in terms of communication and respect in your future relationships. Learn to recognize these signals earlier and communicate your needs.
  • Consider Psychological Support: If the situation weighs too heavily on you, if you are struggling to recover from this experience, a CBT practitioner can help you identify negative thought patterns, manage difficult emotions, and rebuild your self-esteem. Feel free to explore available psychological tests or consult a professional.
  • Take the Psy Test → — 30 questions, anonymous, PDF report (€1.99). 🔗 Analyze your conversations with ScanMyLove — get an objective, structured read of your relationship's communication patterns.

    Related FAQ

    AND YOU?

    Where do you stand? Take the test: Couple Communication

    A self-assessment test to better understand where you stand.

    30 questions · 15 min · PDF report from €1.99

    Take the test

    SCANMYLOVE

    Why did they disappear?

    Analyze your last exchanges: ScanMyLove reveals the withdrawal and disengagement signals that precede the silence.

    Analyze my conversation

    Why Does Someone Ghost?

    The reasons for ghosting are multiple and often complex. They can include a fear of conflict or confrontation, an inability to manage their own emotions or those of others, a lack of emotional maturity, an avoidant attachment style, or simply a disinterest that isn't communicated out of fear of hurting – paradoxically. It is rare for ghosting to be a personal attack; it more often reflects internal difficulties in the "ghoster."

    How to Recover from Ghosting?

    Healing involves several steps: acknowledging the pain, accepting the lack of closure, stopping self-blame, and focusing on your own well-being. Surround yourself with support, engage in positive activities, and if necessary, seek professional guidance to help you process the experience and strengthen your emotional resilience. CBT, for example, can help you restructure negative thoughts related to the event.

    Is Ghosting Always Intentional and Malicious?

    Not necessarily. While the outcome is painful, the intention behind ghosting is not always malicious. Often, the person who ghosts is themselves grappling with personal difficulties, anxieties, or an inability to communicate their needs and feelings in a healthy way. It is a maladaptive defense mechanism rather than an act of deliberate cruelty, although this does not diminish the suffering of the person who has been ghosted.


    Analyze Your Conversations Psychological Tests psychologieetserenite.com Gildas Garrec, CBT Practitioner in Nantes

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    Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

    About the author

    Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

    Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.

    📚 16 published books📝 1000+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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    Ghosting: 13 Subtle Red Flags in Last Messages You Missed | CBT Therapist Nantes | Psychologie et Sérénité