The silent treatment is not only silent, but can be deadly. Deadly, that is, to relationships. Deadly, more specifically, to the trust, love, safety, communication and intimacy that preserve and nourish relationships.
The silent treatment (also known as stonewalling) entails a partner’s (the silencer) passive-aggressively refusing to communicate with the other (the silenced). Unlike avoidance (a conflict-aversion defense), the silencer deploys the silent treatment with toxic purposes in mind.
The silencer’s aim is, above all, to silence communication. More specifically, it is to render the other invisible and, in so doing, induce in the “other” feelings of powerlessness and shame. (Note that the experience of powerlessness often evokes shame.)
The silent treatment is a statement of contempt, relating, “You aren’t worth the energy it would take me to acknowledge your existence, let alone your feelings or needs.”
The silent treatment tactically communicates, You have done something wrong, seriously wrong—wrong enough to warrant my repudiation of your existence.
Its message is menacing and extortive—menacing in its implicit accusation of guilt, and extortive in the lose-lose proposition it makes: either you confess to a “crime” (against the silencer) you may be unaware of having committed (a degrading concession), or, if you don’t, the silencer continues to blot you out.
The silent treatment is a technique of torture. This may sound hyperbolic, but human beings need (on the most basic level) recognition of their existence. The withholding of this recognition, especially if protracted, can have soul-warping consequences on personality. (Just consult attachment theory for proof of this.)
It is deeply disturbing to be silenced (stonewalled), especially by someone you love, or someone you believe (or want to believe) loves you. The silent treatment aims, therefore, to exploit a very deep, elemental vulnerability.
Understandably it is the kind of vulnerability from which one desperately wants relief. And the controlling, abusive silencer holds the cards—he can provide relief by deciding if, and when, to reinstate his recognition of your existence.
However, like many abusers, he may require something of you first–namely, your capitulation. From the silencer’s perspective, “capitulation” may involve his metaphorically bringing you to your knees, meaning he may demand that you appeal to, plead for and/or beg his forgiveness as a condition of his readmitting you into his good graces.
As noted, you may feel coerced into admitting something you didn’t do, say or mean. This, after all, is how false confessions occur: the accused feels so exhausted, disempowered and helpless to be heard against the monolithic accuser that, simply to escape the hell of being disbelieved, she relents (and confesses).
Or else she may begin to wonder, under the prolonged, accusatory assault, whether she’s crazy; whether maybe she is, in fact, guilty of a crime that not too long ago she was mystified and/or outraged to be accused of.
As I suggested in The Pathological Self-Confidence of the Sociopath, it’s not so hard to jar the confidence of, and foment doubt in, others. While we invest some degree of trust in our perceptions, that trust can be surprisingly fragile. Because we tend to be built with more uncertainty than certainty, we are prone, especially facing another’s prolonged, implacable invalidation, to feel self-doubt rising like flood-waters.
The abusive individual, whether narcissistic or sociopathic, exploits this natural psychological frailty. For this reason (and others) he will prize the silent treatment for its capacity to sow insecurity, dread, even terror, in its intended target.
(My use of “he” throughout this, and other, posts is a convenience and not to suggest that women are incapable of the behaviors discussed. This article is copyrighted (c) 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
You all so supportive I don’t know where I’d be without you
Hi Everyone–
Can someone remind me why I can’t call the ex today and see if he is back with his exwife and child on Mother’s DAy?
I have been in NC since oct. 4th and have moved states away and lost everything. And yet– he blamed it all on me and how I reacted when I got angry at his bro for lying about me and trying to get his bro– the man I so loved– to dump me b/c i did not own a house.
Love to all of you!!
Oxy– Happy Mother’s Day big time to you for you are the mother of this site!!!!!!
Donna– God bless you and thank you for bringing your LF children together.
Dear good grief,
Think of it this way. You are addicted to cocaine. You are going “cold turkey.” You KNOW cocaine is bad for you, but it felt so good when you did it, you want that sensation you had the first time you snorted it.
Your LOGICAL BRAIN knows it is bad for you, but your EMOTIONAL BRAIN is crying out for the DRUG. KEEP IN YOUR LOGICAL BRAIN. Do waht you KNOW IS RIGHT, not what you want to do. Take care of YOU. You CAN and ARE kicking the “habit” and for a while your body and emotional mind will scream for teh drug, but you know that you have to protect yourself from this addiction ruining your life.
Come here and read the archived articles….go to the gym and work out (physical exercise will help burn off some of the emotional brain chemicals that make you crave THE DRUG) It really IS A DRUG, only you got that drug from your love for her. Your BELIEF that she loved you.
You can over come this, but now you are in cold turkey and it feels like you are in agony and if only you could have some of teh drug (contact) you will feel better, but believe me, IT WILL PUT YOU BACK TO SQUARE 1, and you will suffer more in the long run. you ARE STRONGER THAN YOU FEEL!
Dear Meg,
Thank tyou sweetie! I appreciate that so much. My step son called me this morning to wish me a happy MD and his son came on the phone to also wish me a happy MD, and my own boys wished me a happy MD—and you know what, this is one of THE happiest MDs I have ever had. I am P-FREE.
As for “Why” you want to know that information—YOU KNOW THE ANSWER TO THAT QUESTION MY DEAR! Now, you sit right down and you write 500 times and turn it in by 5 p.m.
“He IS the LIE. HE is EVIL. I am better off WITHOUT HIM.” LOL
You know that is the truth! The truth will SET YOU FREE but first it will PITH YOU OFF! (((hugs))))) and always prayers
Good Grief
You have GOT to find something to focus your energy on. Go to the gym, jog, ride a bike, SOMETHING…..
“Getting through to her” is NOT going to happen.
Words mean nothing to her as she doesn’t have “feelings” & emotions like you do. What you DID for her means NOTHING to her.
Emotionally she is torturing you. Instead of being consumed with the task of trying to REACH HER, try focusing on why you need to LET HER GO.
Love is suppose to feel good. Love is NOT torture. Love is not ABUSE.
Dear Meg,
I hope you are feeling a little better today. I think it is important though, that when you see your therapist on Monday that you tell him how you feel so low at times.
I don’t know if he has put you on meds or not for depression but occasionaly for some people these medications can increase suicidal thoughts. If you were having them before as well, he needs to be aware of that.
I am NOT saying that the meds should be stopped! I am just saying that it is something to NOT IGNORE.
Whatever you do have in your life that DOES make you happy, think about these things when you feel yourself feeling low.
If you love animals, maybe you can spend some volunteer time at animal shelters helping walk the dogs, cleaning cages etc?
Sometimes it feels good to feel needed. Animals have that way of making us feel good about ourselves because they love so unconditionaly.
I think I remember you wanting to go back to school. Did you find anything out about this? Maybe that would make you feel confident about what you are doing?
Depression is hard to fight because it brings us down. So we have to try to do whatever we can to NOT let it suck all of our energy. Small positive steps….One day at a time.
Goodgrief:
I want to give you a bit of motherly loving.
I am sorry for your pain, and we so can relate. It just plane sucks. Period!
BUT….heres the truth.
YOU and ONLY you are in control of what you do and do not do. It is about self respect and self control.
No one can MAKE you feel the way you do…..only YOU allow it to affect you.
YOU are in CONTROL of how you choose to respond to your feelings.
You are trying to micromanage this sick, manipulated ‘relationship’.
You still ask ‘why’.
You know ‘why.
You are rationalizing your importance to her?
YOU ARE IMPORTANT, this is why you need to move on!
She will never validate or give you the ‘closure’ you are so needing from her.
YOU MUST DO THIS ON YOUR OWN! Away from the unhealthy relationship.
This is crazymaking, and your participating. Perpetuating your agony.
If you want the healing to move along, you must stay NO CONTACT. When she creeps into your head, set a time limit (5 minutes) and disgard the thoughts. You need to work your plan and not deviate. This takes strength, which you have. You are allowing her to live rent free in your head and stop you from moving forward.
This is a circle and you keep landing up where you started off.
As cruel as this is, there are lessons from pain.
You are NOT happy, so STOP IT! You have that control.
Yes, do something for yourself…go out today and buy that punching bag. Learn to dance salsa, do yoga…….But most of all learn to breath. When you feel yourself getting out of control……focus on breathing to bring yourself back to YOU!
It might be helpful for you to find a AA or Alanon meeting to go to……replace the word alcohol with your ex’s name and learn about it that way. I found this very helpful….there are always meetings going on, day and night so you can run on out and attend, and you have a physical support group around you while your learning the steps to healing.
Good luck to you goodgrief….I bid you peace darling!
ok I don’t know if I handled this well. My son just got home – he is 10 – upset that the skank g/f from next door called his dad during their visitation time. He also had to witness a conversation about the health of the skanks mother between dad and a neighbor of the mother at the food store.
Now, I know these people -neighborhood is too small – and I know they live across from the mother and would be concerned.
But why would someone question DAD about his skansks mom right in front of his son – having no idea if my son is even aware of the relationship. Unfortunately he is, but these people I think showed poor taste – it seems to reinforce that affairs while married/separated are acceptable and normal.
And what if my son didn’t know anything?
I called his dad and expressed my anger of exposing a 10 yr old to these behaviors – of course he rationalized, blamed me, etc. And naturally he says none of what he does is my business. But he watched his own dad cheat and lie and he is repeating history. I fear my son will LEARN these behaviors no matter what I say.
Should I have kept quiet? Can we ever get a point across to these N/S???
He thinks I am only expressing my own hurt and anger – I don’t care what he does on his own -just not in front of my son.
NEED ADVICE …………..
How do I just turn the other way and say nothing???
Good Grief
“She should be fighting for me not the other way around”.
HELL YES!!! THAT IS WHAT I AM TALKING ABOUT!
Dear Newlife,
I have no doubt that you are upset, and that your motive is to protect your son. That said, however, REPEAT AFTER ME…
“The more I tell him what I don’t want him to do, the more he will do it.”
Then, next verse:
“he has no shame, he does not care about our son, but he knows if he behaves inappropriately in front of my son he will get a rise out of me.”
Next verse:
Unless my son’s VERY LIFE in ensdanger I will SAY NOTHING to the P about it. I will discuss it with my son afterwards, at home, but NOT CONFRONT MY X. He will not get it, he will not stop his behavior and he will have “won” because I got upset and let him know it.
MINIMAL CONTACT, ONLY ESSENTIAL CONTACT…NO CONTACT IF POSSIBLE.
I know it is tempting, but you cannot protect your son from knowing his fathe ris a piece of chit and does immoral things. Your son will not “pick up” these behaviors if you have a good strong relationship with him, focus on helping your son, you can’t change the behavior of the P—focus on where you CAN make a difference. And Huggs an dprayers!