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What is Ghostlighting? A sneaky dating trend that's worse than ghosting

etimes.in | Last updated on - Mar 4, 2026, 12:01 IST
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What is Ghostlighting?

Modern dating seems to keep getting more complex with each passing day. Just when we're wrapping our heads around "situationships," "benching," and "choremance," Gen Z drops another dating bombshell: ghostlighting. It's like ghosting got a toxic upgrade, and honestly, it's giving us all trust issues. Dating used to feel like a simple promise—two people showing up, being real. Now? It's a minefield of viral terms labeling every shady move. But ghostlighting? This one's brutal because it messes with your mind. Let's break down this emotional whiplash, why it hurts more than regular disappearing acts, and how to spot it before it drains you.

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What's Ghosting (Quick recap)?

Ghosting in dating is when someone simply vanishes. Poof. No texts, no calls, no "I'm not feeling it" courtesy. Cambridge Dictionary calls it abruptly ending contact, leaving you staring at your phone, replaying every moment. It is a passive-aggressive way of abandoning someone. The victim gets no closure, leaving them confused and full of self-doubt. This may sound harsh but it happens commonly in romance, friendships, even jobs. We've all been there—refreshing DMs, wondering "What did I do wrong?" It's painful because humans crave understanding. Ghosting says, "You're not worth an explanation." Enter ghostlighting: same vanishing act, but with manipulative mind games first. Oof.

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Ghostlighting: Ghosting + Gaslighting = Emotional double-tap

Ghostlighting mashes ghosting's disappearance with gaslighting's reality-twisting. Picture this: Your date peppers conversations with "You're overreacting," "That's not what happened," or "Why are you so needy?"—planting seeds of self-doubt. Then... silence. When (if) they resurface, it's "You seemed busy, I didn't want to bother you." Suddenly, you're the problem for their bailout. USA Today quotes dating expert Amy Chan, "Ghosting avoids; ghostlighting distorts facts so you question reality." It's gaslighting lite—Cleveland Clinic defines full gaslighting as sustained manipulation making you doubt sanity. This hybrid is sneakier, leaving you blaming yourself for someone else's exit.

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The psychological twist of Ghostlighting

It starts subtly: "I never said that," or "You're remembering wrong." You second-guess their texts, memories, feelings. And their disappearing act feels earned. Chan nails it: They dodge ownership, flipping scripts so you're apologising for their silence. But here's the catch: People who are genuine own their flakiness. Ghostlighters deflect and put the blame on you.

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Spot the red flags early (Don't ignore your gut feelings)

Be cautious of someone's behaviour: Inconsistent texts? Excuses for flakes? Check how their behaviour makes you feel. Healthy dating builds trust; ghostlighting dismantles it. Chan advises calling it out calmly if they reappear: "You went silent—I read that as disinterest." Their response tells their intentions. If they take accountability, then they are genuine. If they deflect or put the blame on you, they are a red flag. Avoid them. Your mental peace is more important than their potential. Better single than second-guessing yourself.


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Protect Yourself: Actionable Tips from the Pros

If ghostlit, don't smooth it over. Chan: Name it directly, then watch. No apology? No re-entry. Block, delete, breathe. Anderson: Prioritize actions over charm—consistent doers stay. Therapy helps unpack doubt patterns; friends validate reality. Remember: Decent humans explain exits. This trend thrives on low self-worth—counter it with boundaries. Dating's not detective work. Want real love? Seek partners who communicate like adults, not escape artists. Ghostlighting hurts because it hijacks your inner voice. Reclaim it: "My feelings are valid. Their silence is their answer." Next time someone fades? Let 'em haunt someone else. You've got better plots waiting.


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Copyright © May 21, 2026, 07.59PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service