I think in a lot of cases by deleting particular comments you’re doing other users a real service — to the point that it seems to makes some sense to periodically go back through your old comments in context (by re-reading them in the actual comment streams at the questions/answers where you posted them) and assess whether they’re still useful or whether they’re now just a distraction.
For one thing — in contrast to the case where you’ve deleted a comment another user’s comment refers to — consider the case where instead another user has since deleted a comment that one of your comments refers to. Now your comment is the one left there creating a gap in conversation.
And given that (as noted in the question here) comment-delete actions aren’t automatically mutual in any way — and also give that you don’t even get any kind of notification when another user has deleted a comment from a comment stream where you commented — then unless you go back and periodically review your old comments, you have no way of knowing you’ve left behind a comment that’s since lost its context and now just become a distraction.
(The rest of this is an incidental meta-reflection on why it can sometimes makes sense to edit or update a question/answer to add information, rather than posting a comment to begin with.)
Given that comment streams have an ephemeral/unstable characteristic where, due to comment deletion, “conversation gaps” can end up happening that can’t really be fixed, and so comments can end up losing context and instead being distracting — then I think that suggests: in the cases where you have something to add of substantial informational value, then instead of posting it as a comment, it’s worth considering to edit the question/answer it’s related to and instead add it there.
The reason for trying to make sure all the useful information migrates into the question or answer is that unlike comments, which as noted in this Q&A here and meta discussions, can lose context and are immutable, something you add to a question or answers can be re-edited and updated later — importantly, even collaboratively, by users other than you. So that helps ensure your contribution can retain relevance in context rather than ending up just being a distraction.