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.)
i will do some research and get back to you but i need to know is it anger and depression or anything else as i want to find the best solution for you?
oh and how old is he? sorry
awakening
Capstone is 400.00 a day per their website information. The one in Ark is the one I saw first and looked at their info. Maybe there are others in different states? I just looked at first one I saw.
I don’t believe him to be on drugs however I asked that he be tested when he was evaluated and this was not done. I would like to rule this out for CERTAIN.
He has MORE THAN just an attitude problem but attitude is a problem for sure.
16 years old.
if substance abuse is involved i can get him a scholarship (free admission) today but in so-cal. not sure where u live but it really doesn’t matter. probably the farther away the better so his friends can’t drive there and cause problems.
okay i will look into it. what part of the US would you like me to focus? sorry for all of t he questions.
anger is a problem, depression, possibly bipolar, mood swings, high irritability, that looking for a place to explode (right on the surface) rules don’t apply to him, grandious ideas, lack of reality, feeling very entitled, hatred, verbally abusive, even to his own dog….
He has alot going on…
I would say substance abuse is not a problem. It is possible he has done drugs but I would say no (by opinion) w/o a test to be conclusive.
okay i will get back to you soon. i would be surprised if someone so angry and resentful wasn’t doing drugs or drinking but who knows? that is such a hard age. i will find you help. there used to be a place in arizona that young people went to and they all loved it but i think they may have shut down the teen section. i have many contacts in that field so i will make some calls and get back to you. hang in there!!!!
got it