A Stifling Silence
One of my ex-husband’s favorite tools of manipulation was the silent treatment.
On the surface, it seemed like a childish ploy to get what he wanted, but in reality, the silent treatment is a behavior abusers use to attack their partner’s vulnerability and self-esteem in order to exert control.
I can clearly see now that my ex-husband took plenty of time in the beginning of our relationship to assess how I would react to the silent treatment. It is a skill he practiced and perfected along the way, until the greatest impact was achieved. A sociopath won’t risk losing the relationship, so it was a complicated game he played to keep me off-balance, but not to the point of walking away.
Like every other game, this was all about control, and there were several situations in which my ex-husband felt as though he was not in control. Usually, they were situations when he was being called out on a behavior such as lying or cheating. That was something he just couldn’t tolerate, which always seemed ironic, considering he expected his victim to tolerate everything.
In other words, in situations when a normal person would stand and face the music for his mis-behavior and wrong doings, the sociopathic spouse turns into the perpetual child, responding with the equivalent of: You can’t be mad at me, because I’m mad at you.
Harmful Intent
Why is the silent treatment so harmful?
First of all, it’s only intent is to cause harm. This isn’t the normal time-out from an argument that couples may agree upon; it’s one person isolating the other, withholding emotion, approval, and acceptance. It is a means of punishing another person.
Since it is very likely that the sociopathic spouse has already isolated his or her partner from family, friends, and other emotional support systems, victims of abuse usually rely heavily on their only remaining relationship. And that is exactly how the abuser wants it; in fact, that is exactly the situation he or she has worked so hard to create.
With this act of manipulation, several things are happening to the victim:
Self-doubt: the victim begins to question the situation and wonder if he or she did something wrong or actually is the one at fault (even though instinctively, we know this is not true).
Feeling abandoned: if the victim has prior abandonment issues, this isolation can feel very much the same as being physically and emotionally abandoned
Loneliness, shame, guilt, and all the emotions that come from being ”˜punished’ or scolded by another person.
Increased anxiety: what if he or she leaves me or stays mad at me, what will happen? What if he or she hurts me or the children. This is especially true if the silent treatment is accompanied by the tell-tale angry outbursts, tantrums, and other forms of non-verbal communication expressing anger.
The Victim’s Mind Does All The Work
The result of anxiety is the brain creating a plethora of worst case scenarios. The abuser can spend very little energy while the victim’s brain does all the work. We can, essentially, talk ourselves into believing that reconciliation is better than any of the alternatives; thus, we may give in, take responsibility for things we didn’t actually do, apologize instead of demanding an apology, and validating the abusers belief that we are dependent upon the relationship, and therefore, on him or her.
When a partner isn’t speaking to you, it is a clear sign that he or she is angry or upset, even if no words are said to that effect. I think this is a key element to why my ex preferred this form of punishment. The silent treatment plays well into the gas lighting technique. It was very easy for him to insist that I misinterpreted his actions, over-reacted to the situation, remembered the event wrong, or my favorite- that I created the drama by starting a fight and accusing him of saying and doing things he never said or did.
Well, of course it would seem as though I started the fight, since he wasn’t speaking to me, but that discounts the fact that his non-communication was instigating an argument. And let’s not underestimate the effect of non-verbal communication- another of my ex-husband’s favorite forms of communication. It’s difficult for someone to blame you for something you implied, but never said.
Alternating Forms of Abuse
Ironically, when it came to arguments that involved taking to one another, my ex-husband would not allow any silence or hesitation in my responses. He pushed for immediate answers in a confrontational and invasive way, accusing that I must be lying if I am not able to answer immediately. Since most of his statements and questions were meant to be confrontation and accusatory, there really was no way to answer, and he knew that. This was just another method of control: the bully tactic.
When someone is in your personal space, it feels like an attack and immediately creates panic. My response was usually to shut down and not engage back in the argument, especially since everything I said would be used against me later, twisted in meaning, or dismissed entirely. His verbal attacks would, of course, be denied entirely when referred to at a later date.
Both methods, the silent treatment and bullying, were effective ways of asserting control. Neither method was used with the intention of reconciliation or compromise. To me, it is an especially insidious and cowardly form of abuse in which the abusers deny what they do and leave no viable evidence, only the victims’ manipulated memory.
Lessons Learned (and Un-Learned)
As a survivor, one of the most difficult stumbling blocks to overcome on my path to healing, was undoing the behaviors I learned as a result of living in this relationship for so long.
When my boyfriend asked if he could come to one of my counseling sessions about a year into our relationship, I was all for it. We had been arguing without much resolution, and I knew my counselor would not hold back in telling him the truth about what she thought. After listening to us and asking questions for nearly an hour, she did just as I knew she would and laid it all out as plain as could be.
To my surprise, shock, and dismay, however, she explained that my experience in arguing with my ex-husband had left me little in the way of skills needed to argue or disagree in a healthy relationship.
Whenever I argued, I anticipated that my words would be used against me, or I was being set-up by the questions. I was responding as if my boyfriend was abusive, regardless of what the new reality was, and in turn, I was now the one creating the abusive environment.
This was not an easy pill to swallow.
Recovery After Abuse
I can’t say it was anything I ever expected to hear, but it clearly made sense once I understood what I was doing and why. I am fortunate that I have a healthy partner and a very intuitive counselor, both of whom want me to be healthy and strong. Once the initial reaction to this situation wore off, I realized it was no different from other patterns I had to unlearn and relearn in order to be healthy.
Recovering from a relationship with a sociopath is not an easy process. Every day, I learn about myself, conquer new fears, and continue to heal. It can be frustrating and exhausting at times, but even when I have felt at my lowest point during this recovery, it has always been worth it. There is a sense of freedom that comes with healing after abuse; it may be hidden for a while under the guilt, or shame, or uncertainty, but once I began to experience joy without fear, I knew it was not something I would ever give up again.
Great article. So many people underestimate the power of the “silent treatment” as a tool of abuse. Frequently, it is also compounded by adding menacing stares and aggressive body language. Once we escape the fear-based coercive control, it is truly a whole new world.
Quinn – thank you so much for another insightful article. Your explanation of the experience will certainly help so many Lovefraud readers.
This article really helped. I was subjected to this kind of treatment on and off for 7 years. The last time he wouldn’t speak to me for 8 days and only started speaking (a little) because I’d asked someone to help me. He’d isolated me for so long I had nobody to turn to. I was so desperate after 2 days I even emailed my landlord ‘I’m being abused’ and received a reply of concern. After 8 days I emailed his friend to ask him to please find out what his problem was. It was nothing in the end. He lied to his friend about a ‘crime’ I never committed. We separated then because I’d told him my money was finished and he relied on me entirely as he wouldn’t work. He was manipulating me into making the separation my fault when he had been working on me for months. I asked him why he was being horrible to me by not speaking. His reply ‘you are more than horrible.’ I did all the housework, paid for everything and tried my best to be good to him. He did nothing except bully. I feel sorry for his current and future victims, of whom he normally has 5+ at the same time. Happy to be out of it and in peace!
Quinn – when I read your articles I am just astounded. It is as if you were married to my ex! One of the things I hated the most about our relationship was the silent treatment. In the early days we rarely argued so this would only happen once a year say, but over the years they became much more frequent.
Over many years, I saw him cut off relationships with both his parents, his sister, numerous friends, neighbours, clients, the list was endless. He would use the same tactics. The row or just his terrible ‘dissapointment’ with their behaviour, followed by the silent treatment. Of course most of these people, didn’t bother with him after that so he would simply never speak to them again. But it often put me in a terrble position. When I look back, there are few people I’ve fallen out with over the years but all of them, without exception, were to do with him. Since our split I have managed to build bridges with a couple of those people and others, like our next door neighbours, have come flocking back as soon as they found out we had split!
You’re absolutely spot on when you say that the silent treatment is a tool. Its a tool that my ex has used against me, the children and so many other people, again and again and again.
But when I finally turned the tables and used his own favourite tool on him, he didn’t like it one bit.
I am now in a very happy, healthy relationship with a wonderful, kind, balanced, gentle man but I am also still learning how to behave.
I love the fact that we can disagree on something and know that it doesn’t matter. There’s no anger, no histrionics, no silence! But I am still getting used to it and still find myself going quiet sometimes and not putting across a point that I wanted to say something.
Its very difficult not to ‘punish’ someone for your ex’s behaviour but I am determinned to learn!
Quinn Pierce
For me, this article has switched on another light in the struggle to know what normal is (after being with a liar and a love fraud)
I quote from your article:
“Whenever I argued, I anticipated that my words would be used against me, or I was being set-up by the questions. I was responding as if my boyfriend was abusive, regardless of what the new reality was, and in turn, I was now the one creating the abusive environment.”
Starting with my family of origin I am learning how to argue, disagree in a more equal healthy way. I am not very popular for asserting my rights in a family that treated me as scapegoat. It is in this family role, I lost myself. My sisters and brother think I am mean, selfish and disrespectful for speaking up (it’s nothing much, just not going to family events, saying no and doing things more on my terms) so it’s difficult for me to go with my gut and follow what’s good for me
Thank you for clarifying how it is, I can perceive relationships as abusive because I do not know how to relate in a healthy way.
It seems ‘safer’ to assume everyone is abusive and relate from there. I have no close relationships because of this defence. At least I am safe from abuse, but I miss the trusting connections I could make at other times. I am not so good at negotiating and staying with- I bolt and cut off at the first sign of trouble breathing a sigh of relief I am safe. Being alone is now my default position.
Is there anyone else who is mid fifties and alone for a long time since their experience with a sociopath?
Thanks Lovefraud for ALWAYS being there
Dearest Bullet Proof, I am now in my late 70’s, alone and disabled but I do have my freedom and integrity to sustain me ( and a few good far-away friends.) Yes, after 23 years of an abusive marriage and now finding my five grown children have inherited the same evil traits, I have gone NC with all of them since 2011. It is a lonely life but one filled with good memories (I chose to forget the bad ones) and living independently with my poem mantra, – “The Man In the Glass”.
Flicka, thanks
Living in freedom and integrity has got to be okay! best wishes to you and I know I am happy alone, perhaps happier in the knowledge I am enjoying every day even though i’m ‘alone’
It helped me knowing that when I finally got away from my ex that he hated the silent treatment far worse than I did-why NO CONTACT is so important in recovery from these individuals. Not engaging with their drama and giving them the silent treatment drives them crazy just like they did you.
It is also so empowering to know and write the words “my ex”. Unfortunately for these people they can’t be called “ex sociopaths”-they still are and will continue victimizing other innocent souls. Ex means past and that is where they should be left. Our future is “no more silence”! Speak out on them and about them whenever you feel the need!
The silent treatment is so arrogant and cruel. It says ‘you’re not important to me. I hate you.’ I didn’t have to do anything at all. He would just do it for days, sometimes weeks then make a lame excuse which couldn’t be disputed. I hadn’t thought of the NO CONTACT from my side (77 days so far) is almost the equivalent. I’m not being arrogant or cruel. I just won’t put up with his lies, his promiscuity and cheating, his living off me and others (parasite), his blame-shifting, his shouting at me for no reason and of course his silent treatment for no reason other than cruelty. I can’t do anything about the slander as I have NO CONTACT with him or mutual ‘friends’ but my own family and friends know all his lies about me are ridiculous. They tell me not to be so trusting and generous with users.
They can’t be called ‘ex sociopaths’ because they still are sociopaths. But – take comfort in this one – they are ‘sociopath ex’s.’ You can now say ‘I have NO CONTACT with my sociopath ex.’ !!!
The day my divorce was final I could truly feel burdens of his sociopathic rocks fall from my shoulders. great peace has come calling him my “ex sociopath spouse” but often a heavy heart knowing he is still the “sociopath father”. Be strong all you moms out here because your children need to see your strength! They eventually too will have to be faced with NC but can do what they need to do if they have you for a role model.
Great article! This description actually reminds me of one of my co workers. I worked for an airline for 25 years. During 10 of those years prior to 9/11 I worked at an office in a hotel. On one occasion my co worker became angry at me and didn’t speak to me for TWO years! We stood no more than three feet apart during that time. This practice is so ABUSIVE!
Bulletproof: I am also in my mid 50s, and never went on a single date after my divorce (married 12 years total.) My father and older brother were bullies, and I got married mostly to get away from my birth family. My husband had strong sociopathic traits, and was very narcissistic. Because the divorce and custody dispute went on for close to 15 years, I was left completely shattered and depressed.
I moved around a great deal during my childhood and also during my marriage, and to a lesser extent since the divorce. About six months ago, I moved to a completely new area and bought a fixer-upper of a house. The people in the new area are VERY friendly, and I have been invited to all sorts of exercise groups, book clubs, etc., and encouraged to learn to play golf, etc. I haven’t done a thing! All ages of people live in this community, but it strongly appeals to the 55+ age group, so I definitely fit right in.
After I get the house fixed up I plan to make more of an effort, but part of the problem for me is that I am by nature an introvert, and I really enjoy being alone most of the time. I do plan to make an effort to track down some old friends in the near future.
My ex was very outgoing and was always meeting new people, but had no childhood friends at all, despite having had a very stable upbringing in a very nice neighborhood. He always ridiculed me for having no friends, but I make friends slowly, and we were always either “just moving in” or in the process of “packing up to go.” Despite the fact that he was always meeting new people, he had no close friends at all, and nobody EVER called him. I don’t remember him EVER receiving a phone call from a friend in the 11 years we lived under the same roof. HE called other people, other people did NOT call him.
I hope to live where I am now till my children cart me off to Assisted Living, so I know that it is now “worth the effort” to try to meet everybody on my street, etc. I just need to make the effort.
As far as your problems go with your family of origin, you might want to consider going to family get-togethers but staying in a hotel instead of under Granny’s roof, or going for Thanksgiving dinner, but just being there for the afternoon. A lot of people can deal with their families only for shorter periods of time, and switching to shorter visits often works out well for everybody. It’s easier for you, and the relatives don’t feel as offended by shorter visits as they would by a total boycott of all family functions.
I hope you are able to rebuild a social network for yourself in time, but don’t feel that you have to have any certain number of friends to have a complete life. I have a number of cousins who mean a great deal to me, and I always enjoy their company if I get a chance to see them.
Divorced from Gaslighter
Thanks, Yes fitting in with the right community age wise seems important. I am looking to move to somewhere more appropriate in terms of community and new friends…new starts..(even though I’m mid fifties)
I’m at a loss how other women met good men after these sociopaths, how they could trust another man. Were they not checking everything, obsessed, unable to trust?
I’d love to find the courage to love again…but happy to enjoy this life alone, if that’s what’s going on. Thanks for your encouragement
I’m in my mid sixties and happy to be alone in peace now. But I never say never!
I have not posted to this site in several years after my one and only ordeal(so far)with a sociopath. However it was a Godsend at the time and the hardest advice I had ever had to adhere to. The “NO CONTACT” clause was the hardest at first. Everything in this article is so true! The ways they manipulate you and make you think you are the one at fault for everything because you are such a trusting soul and always want to see the good in people and think by your good example they will change and follow example. What hit home with me in this article though was the statement “I was now the one creating the abusive environment.” After dealing with a sociopath for 5 years, I became extremely hypersensitive to anyone I met. The smallest red flag became a BULLSEYE to me and I ran without giving a possible “normal person with faults” a chance. This in turn, led me to think that I was now my own enemy. All I thought about when these red flags popped up was how the “ex” treated me and how this would lead to the physical, emotional, and financial abuse I had succumbed to before. It is a learning curve nonetheless and I suppose the level of your sociopathic abuse determines the level of your recovery. I may or may not have let a few good people go out of my life but I am just now getting to the point where I make my own decisions without premise of thinking about the sociopath and seeing people for their faults and not out “to get me” status. It’s a wonderful thing when you finally regain your own emotions back and you realize you can be the person you once were before the ordeal. Case in point, I was at a “function for our city” a while back, and all of a sudden the NEW person in my ex’s life came up to me like she had known me for years and even knew my name! I was taken aback for sure! But it all flooded back to me as my EX walked up with yet another person I didn’t know as I was introduced as the “EX” by the new girlfriend” I could have succumbed and been meek and pretended like I was glad to meet the new people like nothing ever had happened……..But what came out of my mouth made me know that I was done!!!! I shook their hands and said YES I AM……..ONE OF MANY!!! And then I abruptly walked away…………….I did see my ex’s eyes roll when I said it and there were no words out of any other mouth. I’m sure they all thought I was crazy and drove home the points that the EX had told them about me, but it is their problem now. NOT MINE!!! Recovering from a sociopath is a very specific journey for each individual, there cannot be a timeframe set, just learning your heart all over again and learning to trust it as well as others is the key.
Well done. You can say all you need on here. Remember you’re the normal one. I’m sure you realise it now!
yes, “normal” is why they picked us!
Hi Donna- thanks for your article. I haven’t written in a while. Its been a little over a year now
since NC, after 12 long years of abuse. I also got the silent treatment alot and then the tantrums with
scary outburst ie rage. I know he will act out again- only I will not be his victim. He has a new
victim now. Just living a much happier life for now and recovering from all the trauma.
ah yes, the inability to ever disagree
or u get to face his rage.
cuz once u’ve even gently offered a difference, when u back down, its called pacifying & thats evil also. hes good at recognizing it cuz everyone does it to him to Shut Him UP!
lol