New data from the Hint App suggests that former partners often remain part of a private emotional audience, shaping how people measure change, success, and recovery years after a relationship has ended.
A breakup can remove someone from daily life without removing them from the way a person imagines being seen. Contact may fade, routines may change, and a former partner’s opinion may no longer have any practical claim on the future, yet many adults still picture how an ex would respond to the lives they are building without them.
A survey by Hint App of 13,400 adults across the US, UK, Canada, Australia, Europe, and Latin America found that 74% have imagined what an ex would think about a major life decision. 68% said they have pictured a former partner’s reaction to a personal achievement, including a promotion, fitness transformation, or new relationship.
The pattern points to a form of attachment that is quieter than longing and more complicated than nostalgia. In these cases, the ex is not always someone a person wants back. More often, they appear to function as a witness to an earlier version of the self: the person who was left, underestimated, unseen, or emotionally unfinished. Imagining their reaction becomes a way of testing whether that older story has changed.
The behavior often hides inside ordinary moments. A person posts a photo from a trip and realizes the image was partly arranged with one former viewer in mind. A career update becomes more than professional news because it also carries the hope of being recognized differently. A new relationship, a new body, or a new city can become evidence that life did not stop where the breakup did.
Among respondents, 63% said they have wondered whether an ex regrets the breakup, while 59% said they have shared something online while hoping a former partner might eventually see it. 52% said they have achieved something partly because they wanted an ex to know about it.
Kirill Liakh, Managing Director of Hint App, said the findings suggest that moving on is often less linear than people assume.
“People tend to imagine moving on as a clean emotional exit, but memory rarely works that neatly,” Liakh said. “An ex can disappear from someone’s daily life and still remain part of how they measure change. In many cases, people are not trying to return to the relationship. They are trying to be seen differently by someone who once had emotional authority over them.”
The survey also found that 48% of respondents said the first person they imagined telling after a major achievement was an ex rather than someone currently in their life. That figure suggests that emotional significance does not always follow present-day intimacy. Someone can be absent from a person’s life and still occupy the first seat in the private audience.
Social media appears to make that audience harder to dismiss, giving people a place to display change while quietly imagining who might still be watching. 61% of respondents said social media makes it harder to feel completely disconnected from former partners, while 57% believe people today are more aware of how their lives appear to exes than previous generations were.
The result is not simply that people struggle to move on. It is that moving on has become visible, searchable, and, for many, silently addressed. A promotion, a relationship update, or a holiday photo can become more than a record of personal change; it can also become a message that never names its intended recipient.
The former partner does not have to be watching for the performance to continue, because the imagined gaze is often enough to keep them present. Long after the relationship has ended, many people are still editing parts of their lives for someone who has left the room.
About Hint App:
Hint App is a symbolic, emotional insight platform with over 1.2 million users that combines ancient practices such as astrology, palmistry, and visual soulmate interpretations with modern technology, including artificial intelligence and NASA astronomical data, to deliver highly personalized reports based on a user’s exact birth details. Rather than offering predictions or quick fixes, Hint App serves as a reflective framework, helping individuals map emotional patterns, understand the deeper timing behind personal and relationship decisions, and reconnect with their inner clarity.
Hint App is a symbolic, emotional insight platform with over 1.2 million users that combines ancient practices such as astrology, palmistry, and visual soulmate interpretations with modern technology, including artificial intelligence and NASA astronomical data, to deliver highly personalized reports based on a user’s exact birth details. Rather than offering predictions or quick fixes, Hint App serves as a reflective framework, helping individuals map emotional patterns, understand the deeper timing behind personal and relationship decisions, and reconnect with their inner clarity.