Her Campus Logo Her Campus Logo
sharon mccutcheon Ru 7if4siHA unsplash?width=719&height=464&fit=crop&auto=webp
sharon mccutcheon Ru 7if4siHA unsplash?width=398&height=256&fit=crop&auto=webp
/ Unsplash

Someone Get the Ghostbusters up in Here

This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Oxford Emory chapter.

I’ve lived in girl world for a long while (i.e. my entire life), so I’ve seen and experienced my fair share of pettiness. Yet no matter how much pettiness I’ve been exposed to and familiarized with, it somehow still manages to disappoint me to realize that some boys can be just as petty as some girls, sometimes even more so. One such petty thing some men partake in is ghosting. To ghost someone is to completely ignore him/her and act like the person does not exist, as though you never knew him or her, nor cared about him or her. Ghosting can also simply be defined as an extremely petty thing to do. I find it funny how men complain about women being very passive or vague about what’s bothering them, but it seems that men do the same exact thing at times, becoming distant, sometimes to the point of ghosting the other person. Girls ghost too, this is true, but I find a humorous sort of irony in guys doing this, too, in this way. Girl or guy, I think those of us who have been on the receiving end of ghosting agree—ghosting needs to stop! It’s an extremely petty, annoying, and insensitive thing to do. Listen up. Halloween’s over, guys, and we’ve had enough of the ghosts. So, take the white bedsheets off yourselves and stop acting like ghosts by partaking in the act of ghosting others. Like no, seriously, stop—it’s frickin’ annoying.

Student at Emory University, Student Instructor for Poli Sci, Founding Staff Writer for Emory Political Review, Staff Writer for HerCampus
Writing for Her Campus, alongside being the Senior Editor of the Emory chapter, strengthens my creativity and ability to teach others. It spills into my professional life by emphasizing my capabilities to motivate, inspire, and learn from my peers.