Why Your Ex Won't Leave You Alone (Even in Ghost Mode)

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
7 min read

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This article is available in French only.

You've broken up — or they've left you. Silence has settled in. No more messages, no more calls. And yet, every morning, you notice the same thing: this person has viewed your Instagram story. They liked your LinkedIn post. They reacted to a mundane tweet. They don't talk to you anymore, but they watch you.

Welcome to the world of haunting.

What is haunting?

Haunting (literally "to haunt") refers to the behavior of an ex-partner — or someone with whom the relationship didn't work out — who maintains a passive and silent presence on your social media after the relationship ends.

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The term was popularized in 2017 by Mashable, but the phenomenon already existed under the name of orbiting, introduced by journalist Anna Iovine in Man Repeller magazine. The two terms essentially describe the same behavior, with a nuance:

  • Orbiting emphasizes the circular movement: the person revolves around you without ever getting close
  • Haunting emphasizes the effect produced: you feel as though you're being haunted by a digital ghost

Manifestations of haunting

  • Systematically viewing your stories (Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat)
  • Liking posts sporadically and seemingly randomly
  • Watching your profiles on LinkedIn, Strava, Spotify, and other platforms
  • Reacting to old content (liking a photo from several weeks ago)
  • Appearing in your "viewed by" list recurrently
  • Never sending a direct message despite this constant presence
The paradox of haunting can be summed up in one sentence: the person is interested enough to watch you, but not interested enough to talk to you.

Why is your ex haunting you?

1. Curiosity without commitment

The most frequent reason is also the simplest: your ex wants to know what you're up to without having to get involved. Social media allows for this surveillance at zero emotional cost — just a scroll, and the information is accessible.

2. Maintaining a symbolic bond

After a breakup, cutting off all digital contact is experienced by many as a definitive act. Continuing to watch your stories is a way of maintaining an invisible thread — a way of staying connected without admitting it.

3. Post-breakup control

Some people need to verify that their ex isn't "doing better without them." Haunting then becomes a tool for narcissistic reassurance: as long as you seem affected, their importance is confirmed. If you post joyful photos, anxiety rises.

4. Silent regret

In some cases, haunting reflects regret that the person doesn't dare express. They would like to make contact but fear rejection, judgment, or confrontation. The like becomes a coded message: "I'm still here."

5. Algorithmic habit

Don't underestimate the role of algorithms. If you've interacted with someone for a long time, platforms continue to promote their content to you — and vice versa. Some "views" are more the result of automatic scrolling than intentional action.

The psychological impact of haunting

The feeling of being watched

Haunting creates a form of asymmetrical surveillance that can be deeply destabilizing. You know this person is watching you, but you don't know why, what they think, or what they expect. This uncertainty generates a state of hypervigilance: you start posting while thinking about this person, choosing your photos based on the image you want to project.

Your social media cease to be a space for personal expression and become a stage on which you perform for a silent spectator.

The impossibility of closure

Émotional healing requires séparation — not just physical, but psychological. Yet haunting maintains the presence of the other person in your digital daily life. Every notification "Viewed by..." is a micro-reactivation of the bond, a reminder that this person still exists in your orbit.

Research in psychology shows that post-breakup contact via social media is associated with:

  • Longer emotional distress
  • Persistent attachment to the ex-partner
  • Slower identity reconstruction
  • More frequent rumination

The interpretation trap

Haunting is a profoundly ambiguous behavior, and it's precisely this ambiguity that makes it harmful. A like can mean a thousand things: nostalgia, boredom, an accidental tap, a calculated strategy, or simply habit. But our brain, seeking meaning, constructs elaborate narratives from these tiny signals.

You then spend hours analyzing:

  • "Why did they like that photo and not the others?"

  • "She viewed my story at 2 AM, what does that mean?"

  • "He stopped watching my stories for 3 days then started again — what happened?"


This obsessive analysis is exhausting and, above all, it's pointless: you'll never get the answer.

Haunting vs. stalking: Where's the line?

It's important to distinguish haunting from stalking (harassment). Haunting generally limits itself to passive interactions on public content. It becomes problematic — and potentially illegal — when it involves:

  • Creating fake accounts to bypass a block
  • Monitoring your physical movements
  • Repeated contact despite an explicit request to stop
  • Sharing your personal information
  • Threatening or intimidating comments
If you feel in danger or harassed, haunting is no longer haunting — it's cyberstalking, and there are legal remedies available.

How to respond to haunting

1. Identify the real impact on you

Ask yourself honestly: does the fact that this person is watching your stories affect you? If the answer is "yes, I think about it often and it's hindering my recovery," then you need to act.

2. Restrict access

You don't have to block — but you can:

  • Hide your stories from this person (Instagram allows this)

  • Restrict their profile (they won't see your posts)

  • Remove them from your friends list without blocking

  • Disable read receipts so you don't know who's seen your content


The goal isn't to punish the other person, but to regain control of your digital space.

3. Resist the temptation to counter-haunt

The temptation to check your ex's profile in return is strong. It's human, but counterproductive. Each visit to their profile reignites the cycle of attachment and keeps you in a bond you're trying to break free from.

4. Don't post "for" this person

If you catch yourself choosing a profile picture, a caption, or a story with your ex's reaction in mind, that's a red flag. Your social media should belong to you, not serve as an indirect communication channel.

5. Block if necessary

Blocking isn't a hostile act — it's an act of protection. If this person's passive presence prevents you from moving forward, block without guilt. You have no obligation to remain accessible to someone who no longer speaks to you.

If you're the one haunting your ex

Let's be honest: many of us have haunted an ex without realizing it. If that's your case, ask yourself these questions:

  • What am I looking for? Information, reassurance, a pretext to make contact?
  • Is this helping me move forward? In the vast majority of cases, the answer is no.
  • Would I do the same if this person could see me? If the idea bothers you, then the behavior isn't aligned with your values.
If you feel the need to make contact, do it — directly, honestly. A clear message is better than months of silent orbiting. And if you don't dare send that message, it's perhaps because you don't really have something to say — in which case, the best thing is to distance yourself for good.

Haunting as a symptom of our time

Haunting isn't just individual behavior — it's the symptom of a relational culture where ambiguity has become the norm. Social media has created a gray zone between presence and absence, between connection and séparation, between interest and indifference.

In a world where everything is visible but no one says anything, haunting thrives. The best défense remains the same as for all ambiguous relational behaviors: demand clarity, and when it doesn't come, create it yourself — by leaving.

Your inner peace is worth more than a ghost like at 2 o'clock in the morning.


Watch: Go Further

To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:

How To Be Confident - The School of LifeHow To Be Confident - The School of LifeThe School of Life

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Why Your Ex Won't Leave You Alone (Even in Ghost Mode) | Psychologie et Sérénité