The Free Pattern Tracker (PDF)
A one-page log: date, exact quote, the flip, your reaction. Print it, fill it in, keep it somewhere safe.
“Orbiting” keeps resurfacing as the term of the moment whenever someone posts about an ex or situationship who’s technically disappeared, but not really: they still watch every story, still like the occasional post, still stay visible in your peripheral vision without ever actually re-engaging. It’s neither a clean goodbye nor an honest presence. It’s a third thing, and it’s worth naming clearly instead of just feeling confused by it.
Why Orbiting Isn’t the Same as Ghosting
Ghosting, whatever else is wrong with it, is at least unambiguous — someone is gone, and you can grieve that and move forward. Orbiting withholds that closure on purpose (or at least, functionally). By staying visible without engaging, the orbiter keeps themselves in your emotional field without taking on any of the responsibility or vulnerability that direct contact would require. You’re left checking whether they viewed your story, which keeps a version of the relationship alive in your head long after it ended in practice.
What Orbiting Actually Does, Mechanically
- It keeps you monitoring their activity, which keeps them relevant in your daily attention without any real investment on their part.
- It creates ambiguous signals (“they still watch my stories, maybe that means something”) that are much harder to draw a clean conclusion from than a direct message would be.
- It costs them almost nothing — a passive view or occasional like requires no vulnerability, no risk of rejection, no accountability.
Is It Always Intentional?
Not necessarily — sometimes orbiting is just passive habit, not a calculated strategy. But intent matters less than impact here. Whether or not someone is doing it on purpose, the effect on you is the same: unresolved ambiguity that keeps you checking, interpreting, and half-waiting for something that may never come. You’re allowed to respond to the impact regardless of what’s happening in their head.
What Actually Resolves It
The uncomfortable but honest fix is usually removing the ambiguity yourself, since the other person clearly isn’t going to: muting or unfollowing, not to punish them, but to stop feeding a loop that’s keeping you stuck checking for signals that were never going to resolve into anything real. If you notice yourself repeatedly checking someone’s activity and building theories from it, that pattern itself is worth naming, regardless of what’s actually going on with them.
If you’re trying to get honest with yourself about how often this pattern shows up — with this person or a recurring type — writing it down with something like the Red Flag Log Tracker can turn a vague, looping feeling into a clear record you can actually act on.