That
is the feedback. Behavior is more important than words and you'll probably never get a straight answer from them--and chances are they aren't even 100% sure why they stopped talking to you. For any one girl, don't worry about it too much--could be any number of reasons & it happens all the time. BUT, if it's a recurring issue take some time to look at each situation objectively and see if it's possible that
you exhibited some type of behavior in each of these scenarios that could've resulted in that feedback. I.E., did you text them all the time, were you feeling good about yourself in the time you spent away from them, did you say anything that might've come across as inappropriate, etc. If so, cool, eliminate that behavior; if you can't find anything, remember it could be something totally outside of your control, but practice more self-awareness next time.
@wifehunter Straw man. Nowhere did I discount the importance of mindset and inner-game and, I think if you take the bulk of my contribution to this forum, you'd see that if anything I prioritize the inner over the outer. BUT to hold onto a set of beliefs while ignoring real world feedback is
delusional. Literal definition
delusional. The strength of one's frame is directly correlated to how well it fits real world application.
For instance, what does Harvey Weinstein have in common with the guy who buys girls flowers, never disagrees with them, and comforts her every time she gets pumped & dumped by her drug dealer boyfriends?
Both of them have 'strong frames'; both of them believe that they are doing things the 'correct way' without taking feedback from the real world.
I feel like we've butted heads on this issue before, but I'll do it again--since I don't think you're doing yourself or any of the guys here any service by espousing these ideas:
You can rationalize avoidance any way you want to; it's still avoidance.