Ghosting, Projection, and the Spiritual Ego: A Psychological and Metaphysical Deep Dive into Avoidance and Abandonment
- By Steven North
- In Musings
Abstract
In spiritual communities and relational dynamics alike, the phenomena of ghosting, projection, and emotionally avoidant behavior are often rationalized under the guise of spiritual growth. This article offers a rigorous and nuanced exploration of these dynamics, integrating psychological frameworks such as attachment theory, trauma-informed neuroscience, and cognitive dissonance, alongside metaphysical teachings on energy resonance, soul contracts, and the distortion of spiritual ego. Drawing upon a lived case study, the role of empathic individuals, spiritual bypassing, and the consequences of vibrational misalignment are critically examined. The aim is to illuminate the underlying forces behind spiritual abandonment and offer pathways to integration, accountability, and heart-based sovereignty.
1. Introduction: When Awakening Becomes Avoidance
Within the language of spiritual development, phrases such as “raising vibration,” “outgrowing relationships,” or “no longer aligned” are frequently used to justify sudden disconnection from once-meaningful connections. However, when these expressions replace honest communication and relational accountability, we enter the territory of spiritual bypassing — a term coined by psychologist John Welwood to describe the use of spiritual ideas to sidestep unresolved emotional issues or psychological wounds.
This paper investigates a lived instance of sudden abandonment within a spiritual relationship — including professional collaboration and shared channeling work — to understand how psychological and metaphysical systems interact to either create healing or perpetuate harm. The work of Stephen Porges (Polyvagal Theory), Bowlby’s Attachment Theory, and metaphysical insights from the channeled guidance of Amy North inform this analysis.
2. Psychological Framework: Ghosting, Avoidant Attachment & Dissociative Coping
Ghosting — the act of abruptly cutting off communication without explanation — has become a normalized form of relational disengagement in modern society. From a psychological standpoint, ghosting often arises from insecure avoidant attachment styles, developed in early life through inconsistent caregiving, which lead individuals to suppress emotions and avoid vulnerability.
2.1 Avoidant Coping and the Nervous System
Stephen Porges’ Polyvagal Theory explains how the autonomic nervous system unconsciously scans for safety or threat (neuroception). High-frequency love or intimacy may register as threatening to someone whose nervous system associates closeness with emotional pain or enmeshment. Rather than process this discomfort consciously, the body instinctively shuts down — triggering dissociation, withdrawal, or silence.
2.2 Narrative Justification and Cognitive Dissonance
When the conscious self seeks to explain these actions, cognitive dissonance — the discomfort felt when behavior contradicts beliefs — must be resolved. In spiritual communities, this often results in reframing the disconnection as a necessary ascension event, claiming "vibrational mismatch" as justification rather than confronting the interpersonal rupture.
3. Spiritual Bypassing: The Shadow of Ascension Language
Welwood’s seminal work on spiritual bypassing articulates a critical flaw in modern metaphysical discourse: the tendency to use spirituality as a defense mechanism. Common bypassing behaviors include:
- Repressing anger or grief under the guise of “staying high vibe”
- Framing emotionally harmful behavior as spiritually necessary
- Avoiding personal responsibility by citing divine timing or energetic contracts
When someone ghosts a friend or collaborator and later publishes an article describing the loss of connection as part of their awakening, this is often a disguised rationalization — one that serves the ego more than the soul.
4. Metaphysical Dynamics: Energetic Mirrors, Soul Contracts, and Resistance
From a metaphysical perspective, we are constantly acting as mirrors for one another. Empaths and heart-centered individuals, in particular, carry a frequency that can trigger others’ unhealed wounds, especially if they embody unconditional love or soul truth.
4.1 The Mirror Principle
When such a frequency enters the field of someone unready to confront their shadow, projection occurs. The loving person is misinterpreted as intrusive, “too much,” or even unsafe — not because of their actual behavior, but because their presence reflects internal dissonance within the other.
4.2 Soul Contracts and Evolutionary Pain Points
Soul contracts often include activation moments — encounters designed to provoke growth. But growth can be accepted or rejected. When it is rejected, the individual may fabricate narratives to protect the ego rather than endure the ego-death required for spiritual maturity.
Amy North, in her guidance, often describes these moments as opportunities for expansion through discomfort. When they are resisted, the contract may dissolve or be deferred.
5. The Lion in the Village: Archetypal Power and Collective Projection
A recurring metaphor in this body of work is that of the lion entering the village — a gentle yet majestic being who is misunderstood and feared not for aggression, but for its presence.
This archetype speaks to the misinterpretation of empowered spiritual individuals, especially those who radiate unconditional love. The lion’s desire to connect is mistaken for danger because its power cannot be controlled.
In this case study, the author’s role as the lion triggered a shutting of doors — energetically and literally — as the other party was not ready to hold space for the fullness of what was being offered.
6. Accumulated Relational Trauma and the Neurodivergent Experience
Repeated exposure to ghosting, invalidation, or abandonment accumulates into what is termed Accumulated Relational Trauma (ART). This is particularly pronounced in neurodivergent individuals and empaths who often:
- Perceive subtle energetic shifts
- Internalize unspoken tensions
- Seek resolution over avoidance
When met with ghosting and spiritual deflection, the experience is amplified. It evokes not just the current loss, but every unresolved moment of invisibility.
The emotional burden is further intensified when the rejection is spiritualized — implying that the person left behind is simply not “vibrationally aligned,” thus invalidating their emotional truth.
7. Restoration Through Presence: Reclaiming Sovereignty and Frequency
Despite the pain, there is profound opportunity for reclamation.
In the wake of the ghosting and emotional rupture described here, the author:
- Took the stage at the MindBodySpirit Festival after five years of silence
- Fully stepped into the role of channel and teacher of Amy North
- Reinforced energetic sovereignty by closing outdated spiritual contracts
This is transmutation — the alchemy of betrayal into embodiment.
The lesson is not to stop loving. It is to stop chasing those who are not ready to receive it.
8. Conclusion: Heart-Centered Discernment in an Age of Bypass
As spiritual teachers, healers, and empaths, we must hold both compassion and discernment. Not all who speak of awakening are willing to live it. Not all who speak of boundaries are practicing conscious closure.
To ghost someone and then claim spiritual ascension is not enlightenment. It is avoidance dressed in divine vocabulary.
True awakening looks like presence. It looks like uncomfortable conversations. It looks like feeling the guilt, the grief, the regret — and choosing honesty over ego.
Let this be the call: to awaken with accountability, to teach without hierarchy, and to love without abandonment.
— Steven North
Channel of Amy North | Vibrational Healer | Heart Activation Music | Soul Mentor
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