What Is Ghostlighting and Is It Happening to You?

You’ve heard of ghosting. You’ve heard of gaslighting. Now there’s a term for when someone does both at the same time — and it’s as painful as it sounds. Ghostlighting is one of the newer relationship terms capturing people’s attention in 2025, and if you’ve experienced it, you already know why it has a name.

What Is Ghostlighting?

Ghostlighting is when someone disappears from a relationship — emotionally, physically, or communicatively — and then denies that anything is wrong when confronted. They go cold, pull away, stop engaging, or vanish entirely, and then when you try to address it, they turn it around on you.

‘I haven’t been distant, you’re just being needy.’ ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about, everything is fine.’ ‘You’re imagining things.’

The ghosting makes you feel abandoned. The gaslighting makes you feel like you caused it — or worse, that it isn’t even happening.

Why It’s So Damaging

Ghosting alone is painful. It leaves you without closure, confused about what went wrong. Gaslighting alone is disorienting — it erodes your sense of reality. Together, they create a particularly cruel dynamic: you’re being emotionally abandoned while simultaneously being told the abandonment isn’t real.

This leaves you in an impossible position. You can’t address something the other person won’t acknowledge exists. You can’t get closure on something they insist isn’t happening. And over time, you start to wonder if you really are the problem.

Signs Ghostlighting Is Happening to You

The emotional withdrawal is real and noticeable — but they deny it. When you bring it up, the conversation somehow ends with you apologizing. You find yourself doing mental gymnastics to explain away their behavior. You feel anxious when they’re around and confused when they’re not. You’ve started monitoring their mood constantly, trying to figure out what you did wrong.

You feel crazy — but in calmer moments, you know something is wrong.

Why People Do It

Ghostlighting is often used by people who want to create distance or exert control without having to take accountability for it. It’s a way of punishing a partner while maintaining plausible deniability. Some people do it consciously and strategically. Others have learned it as a conflict avoidance pattern and don’t fully realize the impact.

Either way, the effect on you is the same — and the effect is real.

It Often Appears in Narcissistic Relationships

Ghostlighting is especially common in relationships with narcissistic or emotionally avoidant partners. The silent treatment — withdrawing as punishment — is a hallmark of narcissistic behavior. Pairing it with gaslighting (‘I’m not giving you the silent treatment, you’re just being dramatic’) amplifies the control and keeps the victim destabilized and self-blaming.

What You Can Do

Start by trusting what you observe. Write down specific instances — dates, what happened, what was said. This isn’t paranoia; it’s gathering evidence for yourself so that your reality stays anchored.

Set a clear, simple boundary: ‘When you pull away and then tell me nothing is wrong, it leaves me feeling confused and alone. I need us to be able to talk about what’s happening between us.’ Their response to that boundary will tell you a great deal.

If they’re unwilling to acknowledge any problem, consider speaking with a therapist individually. You deserve a relationship where your perceptions are treated as valid.

► Trust what you’re experiencing. Our mental health resources can help you make sense of confusing relationship patterns and find your footing again.

Mental Health Disclaimer:

The information on this site is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional mental health care. We are a non-profit organization committed to increasing access to mental wellness education. If you are experiencing a crisis or need immediate support in the United States, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

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