After six months of hopeful beginnings, his heart was quietly breaking under the weight of broken promises. Every last-minute cancellation felt like a silent rejection, each unanswered message a growing void where love once thrived. The sting of being stood up in empty restaurants wasn’t just embarrassment—it was a painful reminder that his feelings were met with disregard.
Then, when silence stretched into weeks, the harsh truth settled in: he had been ghosted. In the shadow of her absence, he sought comfort elsewhere, a desperate attempt to fill the emptiness she left behind. But just as he began to move on, her sudden message shattered the fragile closure, reopening wounds and leaving him tangled in a storm of confusion and hurt.

My now ex gf says I cheated on her, I don’t think I did








Dr. John Gottman, a leading researcher in marital stability, emphasizes that consistent, predictable reliability forms the foundation of trust in a relationship. In this scenario, the girlfriend’s pattern of last-minute cancellations, especially those resulting in the partner being stood up, severely eroded this foundation. The OP’s ultimatum, while severe, was a direct response to a breakdown in reliability that had already caused emotional distress and public embarrassment.
The two-week period of silence, following a history of poor time management, reasonably led the OP to conclude the relationship was over, a situation often termed ‘ambiguous abandonment.’ The OP’s subsequent sexual encounter, while not ideal for relationship repair, can be understood as an attempt to cope with perceived emotional abandonment and uncertainty. However, the girlfriend’s reaction—immediately resuming contact and then weaponizing the OP’s reaction by labeling him a ‘cheat’ to his social circle—demonstrates poor conflict resolution and an attempt to shift all accountability onto the OP while ignoring her own foundational breaches.
The OP was operating under the reasonable assumption that the relationship had functionally ended due to the girlfriend’s actions (ghosting after a history of unreliability). While communicating about the intent to move on would have been the most direct path, his actions were a reaction to her established pattern of non-communication. Moving forward, both parties need to prioritize clear communication: the girlfriend must commit to reliable scheduling and communication boundaries, and the OP must communicate relationship status changes directly rather than waiting for indefinite silence.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.













The individual faced repeated frustration due to their girlfriend’s unreliable scheduling, leading to a clear ultimatum regarding future cancellations. When the girlfriend subsequently ceased communication, the individual felt justified in moving on and engaging with someone else, only to have the girlfriend reappear and subsequently frame the individual as entirely at fault for their actions after the perceived abandonment.
When one partner’s behavior (last-minute cancellations and subsequent ghosting) creates a situation of perceived abandonment, is the other partner ethically justified in seeking connection elsewhere before receiving explicit confirmation of the relationship’s end? Or does the commitment made outweigh the consequences of the girlfriend’s prior unreliable actions?







