Why Do They Like My Posts but Ignore Me?
A grounded reading guide for "why do they like my posts but ignore me" with ordinary explanations, emotional checks, and a better question to ask.
This page is for the moment when they interact with your posts but do not actually speak to you. It is tempting to turn that into a single mystical answer, but real life is usually more layered than that. A reading can look at the pattern, the emotional weather around it, and your next clean move. It cannot ethically claim certainty over another person's private thoughts.
Ordinary explanations to consider first
Before you make it spiritual, make it practical. This can come from habit, low-effort attention, curiosity, guilt, boredom, or wanting to keep a thread without offering a conversation. None of those possibilities excuse poor behaviour, but they do keep you from building a whole life around one guess.
What I would look at in a reading
I would look at the pattern rather than one isolated message, the emotional exchange between you, whether the connection is giving anything solid back, and where your own intuition is clear versus anxious. If tarot is useful here, it is because it helps separate signal from projection.
Clarity checklist
- The like gives you a hit of hope but no real information.
- They know how to reach you and choose not to.
- You are letting tiny signals outweigh the absence of real contact.
A better question to ask
Instead of asking "why do they like my posts but ignore me?" the cleaner question is: What is this low-effort attention doing to me, and what boundary would make it clear?
That question still lets the reading speak honestly, but it puts your agency back in the centre. You are not trying to break into someone else's head. You are trying to understand what is happening and what you should do with it.
Related questions
If you want me to read the actual situation, you can book a reading and write it out plainly. I will tell you what I see without pretending the cards can remove free will or guarantee another person's behaviour.