
The Gaslight Response: What to Do When a Sacked Client Plays the Victim
The Gaslight Response: What to Do When a Sacked Client Plays the Victim
Yesterday, I shared that I sacked two clients. It felt great. Then, this morning, the "Ghost" came back to life.
After 30 days of radio silence—ignoring my emails, dodging my texts, and treating my invoices like optional suggestions—one of those clients finally found their keyboard.
The message? Apparently, it was "impossible" to contact me. They were "disappointed" in my actions. They acted as if I had suddenly disappeared into the night without a trace, despite my month-long paper trail of follow-ups.
The kicker? My system logs show they were logged in and actively using my tools just three days ago. They weren't missing; they were just "too busy" to pay for the value they were consuming.
My first instinct? To go full "Keyboard Warrior." To send a point-by-point rebuttal of every lie in that email. But instead, I hit delete. Here is why walking away is the ultimate power move.
1. Gaslighting is a Distraction Technique
When a client tells you it was "impossible" to contact you—despite your multiple attempts across multiple platforms—they aren't confused. They are gaslighting.
By making the conversation about your communication or your "disappointing" behavior, they successfully shift the focus away from the actual issue: They didn't pay their bill. Don't take the bait. If you engage in the argument, you’re validating their false narrative.
2. The "Digital Receipt" Doesn't Lie
In the age of SaaS and digital tracking, "I couldn't get to a computer" is the modern version of "the dog ate my homework."
If your logs show they were creating content or using your system while ignoring your invoices, you have all the closure you need.
You don't need to prove them wrong to their face; you just need to know you were right to let them go.
3. Your Energy is Your Most Valuable Currency
Blowing up at a former client feels good for about six seconds. Then, you spend the next three hours re-reading your own angry email, checking for replies, and venting to your partner about it.
That client is still stealing from you. Before, they were stealing your money. Now, they are stealing your peace of mind and your creative focus. By choosing not to reply, you stop the theft immediately.
4. Silence is a Complete Sentence
You don't owe a detailed explanation to someone who has already shown they don't value your time or your terms. The contract is over. The access is revoked. The bridge isn't just burnt; it’s been decommissioned for safety reasons.
The "High Road" Next Steps
If you find yourself staring at a "disappointed" email from a client you just fired:
Audit the Trail: Verify for your own peace of mind that you did your part (the texts, the emails, the logs). Once you see the proof, let the guilt go.
The "No-Response" Response: If you must reply for legal or closure reasons, keep it clinical: "Our records show multiple contact attempts over 30 days with no resolution. As per our previous correspondence, the account is closed. We wish you the best."
Block and Move: If they continue to pester you, use the "Block" button. Your inbox is a private workspace, not a public forum for people who owe you money.
Celebrate the Space: Every minute you don't spend arguing with a ghost is a minute you can spend on a client who actually respects the invoice.
The lesson here? Don't let a bad client’s parting shot make you second-guess a good decision. You didn't lose a customer; you gained your freedom back.
