What Your Last Messages Say About Getting Ghosted
One morning, you send a message as usual. The other person doesn't respond. You wait. Evening comes. Then the next day. Then a week. You try calling: voicemail. You check social media: they're there, active, visible, but for you it's nothingness. No explanation, no goodbye, no period. Just the void.
Ghosting is a breakup without a breakup. As a CBT psychotherapist, I find it one of the most traumatizing relational experiences, not because of what is said, but precisely because of what is not said. The absence of closure prevents the brain from processing the loss and keeps the person in an indefinite state of anxious vigilance.
But if you look closely, ghosting is rarely as sudden as it seems. Your last messages almost always contain warning signs that are only visible in hindsight.
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The Myth of Sudden Ghosting
In the vast majority of cases, ghosting doesn't happen overnight. It is preceded by a phase of progressive withdrawal that can last days, weeks, or months -- the slow fade: a gradual disengagement that prepares the ground for the final disappearance.
The 6 Warning Signs in Your Last Messages
1. Progressive Volume Reduction
If you trace a curve of messages exchanged per week, you'll observe a regular downward slope in the weeks preceding the ghosting.2. The Switch to Pure Reactivity
The other person stops initiating conversations. They respond when you write, but never take the initiative.3. Disappearance of Future Projections
When references to a shared future disappear from messages, the person is no longer projecting themselves with you.4. Increasingly Delayed and Brief Responses
Response time lengthens progressively and messages get shorter. The asymmetry between your investment and the response's poverty is a warning signal.5. Avoidance of Relational Topics
When you try to address the "us" -- the relationship, your feelings -- the other deflects, responds evasively, or simply doesn't respond.6. The Last Message: Often Mundane
The last message before ghosting is almost always banal. Not a fight, no apparent tension. Just a "good night" or "see you tomorrow" that never had a follow-up.Psychological Profiles of the Ghoster
The Avoidant Profile
The most frequent. The person with an avoidant attachment style feels threatened by growing intimacy. Ghosting is the least emotionally costly solution: no confrontation, no tears.The Narcissistic Profile
The person obtained what they sought (validation, attention, sexual gratification) and loses interest once the novelty passes. Narcissistic ghosting is often recognizable by a previous love bombing pattern.The Overwhelmed Profile
Some people ghost because they're going through a personal crisis. The ghosting isn't directed at you: it affects their entire social life.The Indecisive Profile
They don't know if they want to continue or stop. So they do nothing. Time passes, and silence settles by default.The Psychological Impact of Ghosting
- Rumination: The brain needs to understand what happened to turn the page. Without explanation, it loops endlessly.
- Self-questioning: "What did I do wrong?" The ghosting activates schemas of inadequacy and abandonment.
- Relational hypervigilance: After ghosting, many develop anticipatory anxiety in subsequent relationships.
How to Process a Ghosting
Analyze Your Conversation with ScanMyLove
You've been ghosted and seeking to understand what happened? ScanMyLove analyzes your last exchanges to identify progressive withdrawal patterns, disengagement patterns, and the clues the conversation contained. Import your conversation on the analysis page for an objective perspective.
Watch: Go Further
To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
Rethinking Infidelity - Esther Perel | TEDTED
About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.
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