Goodbye ghosters! How to boost your self-esteem in less than an hour

in #life7 years ago

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Ghosting: When people suddenly pretend they don't know you.

You know this kind of person:

The girl you used to be friends with turned acquaintance, who still hangs out with your friends. Accidental encounters are usually accompanied by the nagging feeling of not having had closure and the self-worth crushing question of what you’ve done wrong.

The established author you have turned to for career advice, happily answering your questions until the day you send him your (previously requested) work samples.
Follow up e-mails and phone calls remain unanswered and leave you with a sour feeling that you are strangely familiar with from somewhere else.

The crush you have been messaging, who replies with one word answers only and who avoids any type of message that could lead to actual conversation.

Once again, you feel rejected, cast aside, g h o s t e d.

Ghosting: The cruel act of suddenly ceasing all contact with someone without explanation has happened to most of us at least once and — as I am writing this — I am sure that I too have ghosted someone before without having any recollection of my own cruel actions in the past. (As I consider myself a bit of a goody though, I am guilty rather of “slow fading”, ghosting’s gentle sister, who only gradually ceases communication with someone.)

Two popularly referenced reasons for ghosting are:

“Not wanting to hurt someone’s feelings”.

How honourable! Wait, but then why don’t you just try and break it to them gently if you are so empathetic?

And:

“Saving the time and energy that it requires to deal with someone’s hurt feelings”.

How honest! Wait, but why are you telling this to me and not to the person you have been ghosting if you are so practical and insensitive to other people’s feelings anyway?

The obvious reason is:

F e a r.

The fear of actual interpersonal relationships, which are not rose-tinted fantasies. Please remember that by closing a door on someone, sooner or later another door will open up to them. Whereas, when you leave them in a perpetual state of limbo, that door will not close entirely, leaving little room for other doors to open up all the way.

Another less apparent reason for ghosting is hidden in our subconsciousness:
The anticlimactic buzz that we get out of not being interested in someone, who is keen on us, or who needs our friendship or help. Deep down we experience a neurotic high, which is purely based on our fantasies about ourselves.

The fantasy of “being out of someone’s league” comes along with positive images about ourselves, such as being “important”, “cool”, “attractive”, “untouchable”, “smart”. The list of desirable traits that we want to be associated with goes on.

So, why do I refer to this phenomenon as a “neurotic high” or “anticlimactic buzz”?

By ghosting we make use of an old defence mechanism, which was formed early on during our childhood years. Even if we have had a fairly decent childhood, there were always moments where we felt helpless and dependent on our parents’ good will. Sometimes we would feel treated unfairly or even poorly.

In order to survive this harsh reality we developed an “I don’t need you because I’m smarter than you” pattern, which back then, secured our mental sanity.

Nowadays unfortunately, while not being dependent on our parents anymore, we still relive this old pattern, which prevents us from actually connecting with and disconnecting from people, which turns us into smug, ghosting zombies.

This, however, is too harsh a reality for us to accept if we do not accept ourselves as the incomplete human beings that we are.
“Smugness”, “paternalism” or “fear of intimacy” are not on our list of desirable traits that we want to be associated with.

No one considers themselves a baddy.

The less confident a person is, the more likely they are to ghost someone.

So, as a fellow ghostee keep that in mind the next time you come across your estranged friend, the self-centred author or your overly polite, slow fading crush!

Now, after having spent the three minutes that it takes to read this far you probably wonder, what you can ACTUALLY do to boost your self-esteem in less than an hour after it had been crushed by those cruel (yet utterly human) ghosters?

The answer to this is the same answer I would give you as far as any interpersonal problem is concerned:

L e t
g o
a n d
a c c e p t .

“How on earth can I let go and accept while my Facebook wall is plastered with their status posts of “great times” and me receiving automatically generated invitations from them to boring events, which I will never attend..?

Wait, what?! You mean:

U n f r i e n d
t h e m ?”

Yes, that’s right. A little bit of a Facebook spring clean can go a long, empowering way.

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Once you have found peace within yourself, maintaining a positive self-esteem should be a slam dunk. Your mind is such a powerful thing so learn to cherish it.

That's very true. Yet, it's probably one of the most difficult lessons in life..

Hey welcome to steemit.

Another reason for ghosting, or the appearance of ghosting, can just be drifting apart as we get older. I know i have done that alot. But I guess that takes two so not quite the same.

Anyway good luck on steemit it takes time to build up a following and gain traction with your posts but if you keep producing well written posts like this you should do well.

Gave you an upvote and a resteem to start you off.

Thank you, fiveboringgames :-)! I am totally unfamiliar with this whole concept of cryptocurrency etc..
I am an aspiring writer and a friend told me that I should definitely try and put up my posts on steemit. So, here I am, still trying to get my bearings :).

There is a section called #introduceyourself it's often a good idea to make a post there when you have a new account. Let people know what kind of posts you're going to do what kind of writer you are.

Cheers for resteeming this one, good pick!

I really enjoyed this!

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I very much accept that! Thank you :).

The advice is ghost a ghoster? Fighting spookies with spookies :D

Really nice read and good post to start off with, good luck!

Haha, yes :D!! Now that you are saying it, that's probably the bottom line.

I have to admit to being a ghoster. I distance myself personally when I know distance is coming physically. Self preservation over selfish meanness I think/hope!

So, you start to distance yourself when you think the other one might not like you as much? Did I get that right?

I was thinking in terms of family and friends. When they have planned to move, or I have, the ghost mechanism kicks in in preparation of being in their lives less, i think?!

Uhmm, that's an interesting one! I'm in favour of talking to each other, no matter what ;-). It really depends on the situation. Sometimes you even feel closer to people the further away they are. Or maybe (if the ghosting mechanism kicks in) you just didn't have much to say to each other anymore anyway.

Talking and keeping in touch is needed for sure. When you do make the distance real, new friends come in and the ghosting is just natural.

I'm meeting some school friends tomorrow for the first time in over a year but hopefully the days and years spent together will 'unghost' us all in minutes! :)

Oh my gosh this has happened to me a lot recently! (Or maybe I just never noticed it before.)

Depending on how close I was to the person, it will take me anywhere from an hour to a week to mourn the loss. Then my "f* it" mentality kicks in and I don't give a crap anymore. :)

That's a very healthy attitude @lenadr ! I wish I had a thick skin.

I've built it up layer by layer over the years. And believe me, maintaining such thick skin is a constant struggle!
It's easier to feel. Everything. All the time.
But it's painful too. :(