Most freelancers will tell you: getting ghosted is the worst part of running your own show. You pour your skills in, trust someone to pay you, and then … silence.
That’s what happened to one young copywriter who built a landing page that generated thousands in revenue for a small jewelry store. She expected her cut. Instead, the client disappeared.
Months of radio silence later the client’s site crashed. She didn’t fix it. She used it. She made the client think the site was hacked and got her money. The plot twist? The payment came faster than her original invoice ever did.
Now, read the full story:






















I loved this story because it’s equal parts cunning and justified. She didn’t break laws, she didn’t shame the client publicly, she simply used her leverage ethically.
Getting ghosted sucked. So she forced the outcome without burning bridges in a destructive way. It’s clever, it’s bold, and honestly it’s kind of thrilling.
Being a freelancer means more than writing the copy or designing the site, it means protecting your payment. Data shows how precarious this can be. A 2025 report found that 64% of freelancers have experienced complete non-payment at some point.
Another survey of UK self-employed found that 31% reported completing work and not being paid for it. Clearly this isn’t rare, it’s systemic.
Why does it happen?
Freelancers often accept “pure performance” deals because they lack clout or portfolio. That means no upfront deposit, no legal anchor, just faith. When the client chooses to disappear, the freelancer is left chasing.
Contracts and transparent payment terms matter. One guide explains: “Freelancers and companies must agree payment terms before work begins … This prevents disputes.”
She didn’t have that. She had a handshake: 5% of revenue. It worked until it didn’t.
Rather than letting the client flake and hoping for goodwill, she capitalized on her access and data. She used what she knew such as sales, analytics, site access to force a conversation. Then she asked for what was owed.
From a psychological viewpoint, this taps into reciprocity and leverage. The client gained from her work and then backed out. By creating a subtle threat (leverage over site access) she rebalanced the power.
According to Dr. Leon Seltzer, psychologist and contributor at Psychology Today, revenge stories like this resonate because they satisfy our internal craving for fairness. When justice systems, or professional norms fail, our brains still want balance.
He explains that “revenge fantasies often function as psychological self-defense, they help restore a sense of agency and dignity after being treated unfairly.”
Freelancers, in particular, often face power imbalances and emotional labor that traditional jobs protect against. So when one of them turns the tables through wit rather than violence, readers feel vindicated too.
Dr. Seltzer also points out that the storyteller’s restraint was key: “By maintaining control and avoiding escalation, he achieved justice without compromising integrity – a hallmark of what’s sometimes called ‘adaptive revenge.’”
So, what can you all learn from this situation?
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Always secure a deposit or milestone payment before delivering.
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Never relinquish control entirely, site access, analytics visibility, or other checks can give you leverage.
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If a client ghosts, use calm, professional reminders before escalating. She did.
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Avoid hacking or illegal action. She didn’t hack. She merely suggested she had access and insisted on payment based on the original agreement.
What started as a “just for practice” deal turned into a lesson in respect, value, and standing up for your work. The story isn’t about revenge. It’s about a freelancer recognising her worth and refusing to be walked over.
Check out how the community responded:
Many users immediately agreed that she wasn’t at fault and that her boyfriend’s reaction was unreasonable.

![Freelancer Was Paid Zero for Her Work Until She Made Them Think Their Site Was Hacked [Reddit User] - “NTA. He doesn't control you, or who you talk with or are friends with… If he's so insecure… maybe he should put more effort into it.”](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762841748938-2.webp)




Some commenters focused on the emotional side, stressing that the situation was about care and safety, not control.
![Freelancer Was Paid Zero for Her Work Until She Made Them Think Their Site Was Hacked [Reddit User] - “NTA. Your fears are valid and serious … It’s literally a matter of safety, and if he cares about you he should want to make sure your...](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762841738426-1.webp)

A few chimed in with lighter or practical comments that still supported her but added a bit of humor or curiosity.

![Freelancer Was Paid Zero for Her Work Until She Made Them Think Their Site Was Hacked [Reddit User] - “Sounds like a good way to have two exes.”](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762841775522-2.webp)
Freelancing isn’t glam all the time. It can be chasing invoices, worrying about cash flow, and dealing with disappearing clients. But it’s also about ingenuity, standing your ground, and protecting what you’re worth.
This story reminds us that your value isn’t just what you deliver, it’s the respect you demand, the control you retain, and the boundaries you refuse to let clients ignore.
If you’re ever ghosted, ask yourself: do I let it slide, or do I shift the balance? Because sometimes the smartest move isn’t waiting, it’s acting.








