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.)
Joy:
I’m not sure. What you’ve got is public information, but it was gathered by a service. Sometimes for evidentiary purposes the court requires the documents to be issued by the authority which has control over the records. Since the hearing is Tuesday, I’d take what you’ve got in, explain that you didn’t have time to get the official records and ask the court to accept what you have, and state that if the court requires it, you will get the official records.
Joy:
I had another thought. Now that you’ve got the internet records, can you go back to the various states and check out their databases to see if you could get the official website printouts?
hi matt,
i just went back and read some of your posts. good for you for having fun and getting out. i went out before the move and while i was not into picking up men like my friends were i still had a great time and i felt hope. yea!!!
also the “crazy” crap. right there with you. it is so true how they keep us so messed up that all the focus turns to us/me “we are worried about you”, agh!” meanwhile he is getting away with so many crimes, etc, and not help accountable for anything.
it has been p free around here lately and it feels good but i don’t buy it. well i guess that girl texting me is probably him playing games. i asked why does she want to be my friend if so close to him and if so may i ask her last name? well i did a reverse call thing and that is not the same name. same first but not last. i have no intention of befriending her. i couldn’t. but should i ignore her or what? you guys know how careful we have to be to avoid upsetting the p and then having to be punished or worse.
i have been in front of my computer all day. gotta go walk my dog. love this place. you guys rock!!!!!!!!!!!!!
awakening:
You have to be careful in dealing with anybody who has contact with your ex-S on an on-going basis.
After I broke it off with S, his siblings reaced out to me, I had to basically tell them that while I appreciated their friendship, I couldn’t get in the middle of them and S. Also, a few of his friends had reached out to me and extended me invitations. His reaction? To immediately contact my brother and ask if it was “politically correct” to be in contact with the friends, family and colleagues of an ex. I cut off all the contact immediately.
Recently, I ran into the the guy who posted S’s bail when S was arrested and asked S to move in with him when S was released from prison so S didn’t have to live in a shelter. He lives around the corner from me and he always like me for me, whether or not S was in the picture. He took me out to lunch a few weeks ago.
It was very nice — and S’s name didn’t come up once. I suspect that when I refused to bail out S’s sorry ass last November and give him 10 grand to pay up his arrearages to his landlord, that S hit up this guy. And either this guy lent him the money and realized its gone, or he turned down S and S is of no further use to him. In either case, we not only steered clear of the topic of S, but I also know this guy, even if he still has contact with S, is smart enough not to mention to S that he and I have become friendly.
In your case, have you considered changing your email and phone numbers? It buys you some peace of mind. In any case, I can assure you that his girlfriend or whomever she is is screwing with you — at S’s behest.
you are right. i know she is not for real. please the first text i got from her was ,as usual, the night before i had a 4 hour flight home, and he was supposed to be with me but did the “i’ll be right back” game then ignored me. i was devastated, crying and on the floor again. then she texts? i think she was with him and they were toying with me.
do you ever want someone to tell you what was really going on? i can’t seem to shake that. i want to know what he says that makes people keep all of his secrets even after he screws them over?
i want to know what he did at my house that night he refused to leave and he was with that criminal? they had access to my files. and that guy, now in prison for 3 years had a wallet full of gift cards and i know they weren’t all gifts. plus the FBI asked me about my ex and a “gift card” scam but it was in another state, my home town, so not him.
anyway do you just let it go or did you ask people? i think people think i am obsessed if i ask and they end up dead or MIA like that poor other guy.
he lives only about a mile away from me too, in a recovery home that my friends own. great! anyway can you see how good he must be?
awakening:
We all come here looking for answers — why do they do what they do? How can he treat me that way? What the hell is going on?
And then you learn — they do what they do because that is the way sociopaths are wired — to manipulate, lie, abuse and exploit. So many people on this site are looking for “closure” — they want one last conversation with the sociopath asking why the S treated them the way he did. Problem is, there is no closure with these creatures. They would just lie and blame you anyhow.
Gradually you stop looking for the answers to your questions because while you don’t have it out of the sociopath’s mouth — you know, based on your research and learning that a sociopath does what he does and none of it had anything to do with you.
As for your S, I suspect you have the answers to your questions on some level already. You are just at the obsessing and ruminating stage. As a former criminal defense attorney I can tell you flat out that anybody who had that many gift cards on them followed by a visit from the FBI — well, you don’t have to connect a lot of dots to figure out what is going on.
So, gradually you’ll learn to let it go. As for his new victims, gradully they’ll figure out what your ex-S is all about. Because sociopaths just keep on doing what they do until they are either killed or die.
om_forall says:
“I’ve read all of this and I will go visit my drug of choice tonight. I am so far into the denial phase and not sure I want to do anything about it. I am sick. I am seeing a counselor and I acknowledge I am sick and yet I continue to crave this man’s attention……….My eyes are open but my heart needs help…..I feel powerless over this drug and I still live for his kind words and his touch.”————–
Om-forall,
You are in what I call the acknowledgment/denial phase, which can last awhile. On the upside you are acknowledging his behavior is bad for you and you are seeing all the red flags, so you have have already begun the process of sort of having one foot in the door and the other one out the door. I can identify because I went through this for YEARS. In your favor is that you are in counseling and you have already found Lovefraud. Keep going to counseling and keep reading Lovefraud and posting. It may be a slow process, but you’ll start taking baby steps towards recovery.
A sociopath is as you described, like a drug. We have to treat it as such and work on breaking that addiction. Good luck and keep posting and working towards progress. –Jen
Thanks again. It was a very thorough search it shows all his ex wives and all addresses including the newest one and shows me as a relative. So it is a direct link to both him and me. It also shows his date of birth and middle initial and it is a very unusual last name. No chance of any one else in the world having the same complete name and date of birth and physical description. So funny on his paper work for me he could not list the color of my eyes nor my date of birth after all only together 10 yrs and divorced 6 months why on earth would he know such intimate details? LOL! So funny so tragically sad! Really these folks don’t give a flying flip about any of us never have, never will.
ErinBrockovich
“I have decided it’s time to buy a gun—
Having been raised around guns when I was a little lad and being in the service I do know about guns. But I also know what guns do to animals let along people so I am not a big “gun person” myself.
One thing about gun owners and most know this, is that if you ever point a weapon at anyone you must know that you will use it! I tell my own children never point a weapon at anyone unless you know you will pull that trigger and if you don’t know that for sure then never point it at another person, why? Well, if you hesitate just for one second and the target person know/seen this they will take away your gun and then use it on you. So ask yourself this question. Are you willing and able to pull that trigger? If you aren’t sure of the answer then please get rid of the gun or don’t buy it. Plus having young children and guns don’t mix well. If you do buy the gun you must “lock” it up and again like someone else said, “what good is it?”…
Matt
“In New York I googled “New York State Department of Corrections Inmate Lookup”. That got me to the DOC site where I then typed in the S’s name and it all popped up.”
Wisconsin is a good state for this as well, just type in the name in the search field(s) and all court records will be display for viewer and it free of charge.
http://wcca.wicourts.gov/index.xsl
But Illinois is a hard nut to crack, it’s hard to get information here in this state that I know of…