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When Someone Ghosts You Slowly (And How to Spot It)

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
6 min read

You've been chatting with someone on a dating app for a few days. The messages are pleasant, sometimes even enthusiastic. Then, subtly, something shifts. Replies take longer to arrive. Dinner plans remain vague. You hear "sure, why not!" but no concrete date ever materializes.

You're not being ignored — you're being curved.

What is curving?

Curving (from the English verb "to curve," meaning to evade) refers to a form of indirect rejection in which someone maintains minimal contact while systematically avoiding any real commitment. Unlike ghosting, where communication stops abruptly, curving is slow-motion rejection: the person stays present, sometimes responds, but never invests enough for the relationship to progress.

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The term was popularized in 2017 by journalist Chelsea Fairless, but the behavior existed long before dating apps. What's changed is how easily it can now be practiced — and how frequently it occurs.

Characteristics of curving

  • Delayed and short replies: "Haha yeah!" sent 48 hours later
  • Surface-level enthusiasm: messages seem positive but lead nowhere
  • Avoiding dates: "This week's busy, let's talk next week?" — repeated indefinitely
  • No initiative: the person never relaunches the conversation
  • Selective responses: ignores some messages, replies to others
  • Vague compliments: "You're really cool!" with no concrete follow-up

Why do people curve?

1. Conflict avoidance

Saying "no" explicitly is uncomfortable. Many prefer to let the relationship die on its own rather than face a direct conversation. Curving allows disengagement without having to verbalize rejection.

2. Keeping options open

In modern dating culture, maintaining "options" has become a common strategy. The person who curves doesn't want to commit to you, but doesn't want to definitively close the door either — just in case.

3. Narcissistic gratification

Receiving attention feels good. Some people maintain minimal contact not from genuine interest, but to continue benefiting from the validation your messages provide.

4. Chronic indecision

Sometimes the person simply doesn't know what they want. They're not interested enough to move forward, but not disinterested enough to cut ties. This gray zone can last weeks or even months.

Curving vs. ghosting vs. breadcrumbing: What's the difference?

| Behavior | Communication | Intention | Duration |
|----------|---------------|-----------|----------|
| Ghosting | Stops completely | Cut contact | Abrupt |
| Curving | Minimal, evasive | Avoid direct rejection | Gradual |
| Breadcrumbing | Sporadic but engaging | Maintain interest | Long-term |

Ghosting is a clean break. Breadcrumbing is active manipulation (the person sends interest signals to keep you hooked). Curving sits between the two: it's passive disinterest disguised as politeness.

The psychological impact of curving

Ambiguity as a source of suffering

What makes curving particularly painful is the lack of clarity. When someone ghosts you, the pain is sharp but the message is clear. When someone curves you, you remain in a state of permanent doubt: "Are they really busy? Am I overthinking this? Maybe it will get better?"

This ambiguity activates what psychologists call intermittent reinforcement — the same mechanism that makes slot machines addictive. Sporadic and unpredictable responses keep your brain on alert, waiting for the next "reward."

Consequences for self-esteem

Repeated curving can generate:

  • A sense of inadequacy: "What's wrong with me?"
  • Relational hypervigilance: analyzing every message, every response time
  • A tendency to over-invest: trying to "earn" the other person's attention
  • Normalization of ambiguous rejection: eventually considering this treatment acceptable

Attribution bias

Faced with curving, we tend to seek explanations that implicate ourselves: "I wasn't interesting enough," "I should have responded differently." In reality, curving says far more about the person doing it than the person experiencing it.

How to recognize if you're being curved

The three-week test

If after three weeks of conversation you notice that:

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  • You're always initiating the exchanges
  • No concrete date has materialized despite your proposals
  • Responses are polite but empty of substance
  • ... you're very likely being curved.

    The reversal test

    Stop messaging for a few days. If the person doesn't reach out — or contacts you with a superficial message three weeks later — you have your answer.

    How to respond to curving

    1. Name what you observe

    No need to accuse. Simply observe: "I feel like our conversations aren't really going anywhere. Are you interested in actually meeting up?" This direct question forces a clear response.

    2. Set an internal deadline

    Give yourself a framework: "If there's no concrete date within a week, I'm moving on." This protects you from getting stuck.

    3. Don't try to "win" their interest

    Sending more messages, being funnier, more available — none of this will change the behavior of someone who curves. You can't convince someone into being interested.

    4. Accept the information

    Curving is a response. It's not the response you hoped for, but it's a clear one: this person isn't interested enough to invest. Accepting this information is an act of self-respect.

    5. Don't replicate the pattern

    If you're not interested in someone, say so. An honest message — "I don't feel enough of a connection, wishing you the best" — is always preferable to weeks of evasion.

    When curving reveals a personal pattern

    If you regularly find yourself in curving situations — whether as the curved person or the one curving — it may reveal deeper relational patterns.

    Being frequently curved

    This can indicate a tendency to:

    • Ignore weak signals of disinterest

    • Cling to ambiguous relationships out of fear of emptiness

    • Confuse availability with interest


    Having a tendency to curve

    This can reflect:

    • Difficulty setting clear boundaries

    • Fear of confrontation or conflict

    • A need for validation without commitment


    In both cases, working on attachment patterns and assertive communication can be beneficial.

    The key takeaway

    Curving is a mundane phenomenon of modern dating, but its ordinariness doesn't make it harmless. Prolonged ambiguity erodes self-esteem and clouds your ability to identify your own relational needs.

    The best protection against curving remains clarity — the kind you demand from others and the kind you impose on yourself. A person genuinely interested will always find time to see you. If excuses pile up and plans never materialize, the answer is already there.

    Your time and emotional energy deserve to be invested in someone who doesn't make you doubt their presence.


    Watch: Go Further

    To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:

    The Childhood Lie Ruining All Of Our Lives - Dr. Gabor Mate | DOACThe Childhood Lie Ruining All Of Our Lives - Dr. Gabor Mate | DOACThe Diary of a CEO

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