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.)
Dear Meg,
What I am hearing in your above post is tha tyou are ASKING OUR PERMISSION not to go for this job training tomorrow.
You do not need our permission to take or not take a job. to go or not to go. What I am hearing though is that you don’t want to go, you are afraid you are not ready, and are anxious about to go or not to go.
My son came home a year and a half after his X tried to kill him, he had worked all that time and really not done enough healing, he was still as jumpy as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs, I encouraged him to stay off work for a while. He did, for 6 months and has done a lot more healing, but it is time for him to go back to being SELF SUPPORTING. I think he felt a bit like you seem to be expressing right now, he enjoyed the time off, just working here on the farm, but there comes a time when it is TIME to go back into real life, and to making a living again.
ONLY YOU can decide when that time is right for you. ONLY YOU can give yourself permission to go or not to go. It is up to you to make the RIGHT DECISION FOR YOU. Only you know exactly how you feel and whether it is more responsible to go back to work, or to stay off work and heal some more.
I suggest what ever decision you make, make it, stick to it, and don’t beat yourself up over it. so as for me, I give you permission to make the RIGHT decision, whatever it is, for YOU. (hugs)
Sabrina,
Gosh I am sorry to hear that. I thought that you hadn’t mentioned anything about him in recent post and figured maybe things were going ok (at least for the moment at home) I know the quiet/uneventful times don’t last very long.
It sounds like you are going to have some tough decisions ahead to make as well.
I know I read this before but I forgot that you had a young daughter. That makes it even tougher because you also have to do what is in her best interest as well. This is so hard….
There is something about being mistreated in your own home (especially by your own flesh and blood). Hard to put into words but I guess I always considered my home to be a “safe place” . The one place I could go to to “get away” from what ever was troubling me. Do you feel like this?
I have been all over the place (emotion wise) with what I did today (the court petition). I have to keep looking at the situation as this really was my only option.
He is getting worse as far as pushing his limit to the “rules that don’t apply to him”.
Dear Oxy, just wondering if you had any advice on my post here a bit earlier on the (predictable) trouble I am having with my S- son who is living with me. I am in that terrible place again of damned if I do, damned if I dont. My son changes moods from his fun loving old self that emotionally sucks me back in, then changes as we all well know into Jeckyll and Hyde. I’ve told him to leave, he says you will have to get the police to make me, I DONT have anywhere else to go. If my predictitons are accurate, he will be ohh so sorry, begging forgiveness for his own benefit for his rages. Then the cycle continues.. If I kick him out of the house, I dont really know what happens to him-no car, no job, etc. Please, anyone with advice. This is so hard. I love my son, and cant see kicking him out, but cant live this way either. If I “overlook” his hurtful outbursts, I am not being true to my own self preservation- I thought about seeing if my parents-just recently retired could try to take him if he works and pays rent. I dont want to unload on them in any way, but I am thinking he wont treat them with such disrespect-then again, I could be setting them up for trouble they dont deserve. Im not even thinking clearly!!! any ideas? Just kicking him out with no plan of what he is gonna do next is gonna freak him out, and will be ugly and hurtful…
Witsend,Thanks for your response, I posted before I got to read yours. Yes , yes everything you are saying, I do feel. I feel like finally my home is my safe haven- Now, with the PTSD from divorcing x n/p only since last august, I have trouble leaving my home! Feel like i could just stay isolated and not miss anything out in the real world. That said, now my son is trying to manipulate and as you said “rules dont apply to him” in my beloved home.
I find myself so thankful for the good times (short lived) where we laugh and play games together-normal stuff that I missed and yearned for when my son and I were almost n/c for the better part of 3 years or so. I cried and grieved for my son all that time, but knew everytime I tried to initiate any real contact for long, it would end up in rages/hurtful drama, etc.
Now that he is here (due to his step father kicking him out for lack of discipline/motivation/work ethics, etc) I am grieving for the kid to stay consistent and not go into the personality that is so monstrous. I wonder if theres any help for him, as I desparately wanna save him. if you could only see him when he is in a good disposition. I cry as I write this, he is so funny , life of any party, very interesting to talk to, and we have alot of similarities in our humor and some ways of viewing the world. We look like family, everyone can see that he is my son. I dont want him to be a S. This is a life sentence that I know I have to once again give him up. I dont know if emotionally I am strong enuf to give him up at this time. can a parent have a trauma bond with their child? I am crying for my future loss of him as well as my present with him- how messed up is this?
Oxy, I remember your comment about rat poison, that only 1% is poison, but its enuf to kill. In trying to stop the uncontrollable sobbing, and realize that it is what it is. I cant will my son to be any different. I feel so sad that I cant break thru his mental incapabilites and save him. I am sad for him that he is destined to live this tortured life like a vampire in the darkness. With my x N/P I never really felt any sorrow for how his destiny is or felt that he wanted a different kind of life. But with my son, I feel if he could, if he were capable of change, he would not choose this way of life. Maybe I am the one who is delusional right now…
I was raised in the Jehova’s witness religion. When I went knocking on doors with my mom and aunts we were told to offer the watchtower freely and only accept the 25 cents, the cost of printing it. I think the JW’s attract alot of dysfunctional, vulnerable, easily brainwashed people. I blame that religion on alot of the guilt and shame I have carried for years. My mom would go to the school and tell the teachers that I was not to participate in any xmas or other pagan activitys. i was told by my mom not too salute the flag because that was idol worship – got my ass kicked alot for that – and the teachers treated me badly as well. I always did what momma told me too. Like being gay wasnt enuff too hide from her and the world – now i had to hide it from Jehova. Gay men are disfellowshipped and shuned, treated as they are dead because in the eyes of Jehova they are already dead. Bible studys and knockin on doors and being treated like a lepor for that and hell what was i to do with my feelings? JW’s did not encourage higher education because the end of the world was coming in 1969 – well maybe in 84 – what away to raise a child. My mother the Narcissist slut did so much damage to her children. Hmm I was going to comment on being judgemental….Hell’s bell’s – what I have lived with – i promise bloggers I dont make this shit up….
OOOPS – I posted that on the wrong thread – was going to comment on Donnas great article ‘more and less judgemental’ and I came across Elisabeth Conleys comment’s and just had to add my 2 cents…
I have to say that I never felt so much for anyone before. She truly had me blind sided. We were engaged and planning to be married when I found out everything about her was a lie. She seemed a sweet catholic vietnamese girl that my whole family loved. I found out that she had no fortune she claimed, no degrees whatsoever, was on and selling drugs and worked as a prostitute. I found this out after over 2 years. Oh and she was married to another man. Some rich duke that kept her a slave at her house before she fled. I was sleeping with a complete stranger who stole tens of thousands from me. Every doctor I worked with thought she was the sweetest most innocent girl. She had no soul and still tries to contact me.
trucquyhn: Hi. Jeez, that is horrible, just cold cold cold, you’re right… she has no soul. How are you doing? Did you just find out about all this recently?
“Blown away that she could just stop talking to me PERIOD. DONE. NO REASON. THAT IS CERTIFIABLY INSANE, NUTS, COMPLETELY RIDICULOUS. How can anyone treat someone that they even care about as a friend that way, nevermind a lover”
That is exactly how I feel about the way my ex ended things. 2 yrs together and he ended it via text while I was abroad – I’ve posted on here before about what happened.
Speaking of red flags, he gave me the silent treatment fairly early on in our relationship too and it was the most horrible feeling in the world. That was only about 6 months in I think.
When I look back now there were so many warning signs. Even other people who met him at the start of our relationship have since said they felt he was extremely cold compared to my warm bubbly nature and they weren’t too sure about him. But they didn’t like to say in case they were wrong and also because I seemed so happy.
This article was so helpful.
Next time a ‘man’ gives me the silent treatment, I’m gone!