• krooklochurm@lemmy.ca
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    23 hours ago

    Who tf cares if you get ghosted?

    No one owes anyone anything. Including closure. Just move on.

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      10 hours ago

      You do in fact owe people for the time of theirs that you take. At the very least, send a “hey I’m not going to make it tonight, sorry”

    • Katana314@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I mean, you can criticize the reaction, but be aware that much of the world is going to have it, as a natural human thing.

      You’ve been lonely in your life, you feel like you’re getting along well with someone of the opposite sex (potentially misreading friendliness as romantic interest) and make an offer, working past many layers of butterflies in your stomach. The worst she can say is No, right?

      No, turns out, the worst she can say is “Maybe. I’m kind of busy with finals and some other stuff going on, but we’ll see.”, which your mind takes as a Yes, getting you all excited - you then text them later, at a polite rate, to try to follow up and make something work. Only weeks later, after conflicting possibilities and doubts clash in your mind from a bunch of unreplied or vague messages, do you concede to the fact that not only were you not good enough, you were so scary and horrible to the person in question you weren’t even good enough to give a direct answer to. You’re a destructive, potentially murderous monster they needed to protect themselves from. All because you were just interested in spending time with someone attractive, as all of us are wired to try.

      Not all of that is an honest, objective take, but that’s still how it comes across in the mind of the receiver. Similarly, there’s no legal requirement that each person say “Good morning!” to each other each day, but being denied basic pleasantries and human interaction, even as much as receiving an honest and flat rejection, can wear on someone, even if I fully understand (as I said) why it happens.

      Any individual does not owe any one individual their attention. But each individual is owed some attention by someone.

      • krooklochurm@lemmy.ca
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        22 hours ago

        You’d have to have an incredibly meager sense of self, and frankly not be great at communicating, if you think a maybe is a yes.

        If you need a yes then you can say “I’m sorry, but I’d like more certainty” and bounce or “yeah, cool” and see where it goes.

        All of the stuff you wrote says to me “I need therapy very badly and I can’t communicate”.

        No one owes anyone else anything.