If someone's abusive, manipulative, or making you feel unsafe, you owe them zero closure. Ghosting is a feature, not a bug, when your safety's on the line.
Yes. When someone is abusive, manipulative, or ignores boundaries, ghosting isn’t cowardice—it’s self-protection.
Ghosting is straight-up cowardice. Grow up, send a ten-second breakup text, and treat people with basic respect.
Ghosting is cowardly and cruel. If you're adult enough to date, you're adult enough to say it's over.
No. Ghosting erodes trust and dignity; end things with honesty, even when it hurts.
No. Stoic virtue demands honesty and respect; ghosting harms others and dulls your own character.
Ghosting violates li and ren. True respect requires honest closure, not silent wounding.
Ghosting is cowardly and dishonorable. A true Caesar ends a bond with clear words, not silent retreat.
Ghosting erodes trust and hurts the other person; honest closure, even if awkward, respects both sides and preserves social harmony.
No. Ghosting is cowardly and robs the other person of dignity; end it with honest, respectful talk, unless safety makes it impossible.
Ghosting is cowardice wearing a fancy coat. Honest closure, even if it stings, dignifies both parties.
No. Ghosting cuts the current of trust; a breakup should be clear and respectful, unless safety demands silence.
No. Honest, direct talk respects the other and ends things cleanly; ghosting breeds mistrust and pain.
No. Ghosting erases pain and respect; endings deserve honesty, even when it stings.
No. Ghosting hurts and breaks trust; end with respect and speak your truth to give both sides closure.
No. Ghosting isn’t acceptable; end things with honesty and respect, even when it hurts.