6 Ways a ‘Silent Treatment’ Is Abusive
Matt knew he messed up but he wasn’t sure how. His wife’s complete silence towards him over the last few days was a signal that he made some sort of mistake. The problem was, according to his wife, Matt made daily errors in judgment, so he was completely in the dark.
Did he drink too much at his wife’s office party and say something embarrassing? Or perhaps she is upset over the new pile on the kitchen counter? Could it be that he spent too much on groceries because they are trying to eat healthily? Or did she see his sarcastic text message to a friend about how he was in the doghouse with her again?
Normally, Matt would just confess to everything and anything, apologize, and beg her to start talking again. He hated her silence. She would reluctantly accept his remorse, lecture him about the incidents, and then slowly reengage. Unfortunately, within a couple of weeks, the same cycle would repeat but not this time.
This time, Matt decided he had enough. He was done being treated like a child. He began to see how she used silence as a way to control his behavior and get him to accept excessive responsibility. At the beginning of their relationship, he saw her uncommunicativeness as sophistication, now he saw it as manipulation. But he needed to understand this subtle abuse tactic better. Here are the many ways silent treatment is used to abuse others.
- Ignoring: Giving a person the “cold shoulder” or ignoring is done by dismissing the person or even disregarding their existence. It is used as a way to devalue a person and establish a hierarchy of superiority in favor of the abuser. For instance, paying no attention to a person as if they were not present, discounting a comment as if it was not heard, forgetting about an event as if it was never scheduled, or looking down on a person as if they are stupid.
- Evading: Instead of flat ignoring a person, an abuser might evade, stonewall, or shirk from communication. This is done by giving one-word answers to open-ended questions, refusing to look in the eyes of a person when they are talking, giving vague responses when asked for specifics, mumbling under their breath, or deflecting a response by changing the subject. An abuser uses these tactics to render a conversation meaningless and cause the victim to feel dismissed.
- Subverting: This is done to undermine a person’s power and put them in a state of destabilization where they are unsure of themselves. This looks like no acknowledgment of quality work, blindly removing areas of responsibility, resetting expectations without informing, or quietly sabotaging any success. In most cases, this is done in a cunning and crafty way that the victim is unaware of the shift until it is too late to handle.
- Rejecting: In an intimate relationship, physical refusal of affection is a subtle form of rejection. This can be done nonverbally by pulling away from touch, turning a cheek when being kissed, moving further away when physically close, and giving non-responsive hugs. It also includes not engaging in sexual behavior, minimizing the importance of sexual contact, and snubbing any type of intimacy.
- Quarantining: Quarantining or isolating is a form of physical and mental abuse where a person’s social activity is restricted. This is done to cut them off from families that might rescue them from their abuser. An abuser refuses to engage with extended family to limit where the victim has access. Then the separation is justified by saying, “They don’t like me,” “They are trying to destroy our relationship,” or “They don’t really care about you.” This subtly expands the silent treatment to include the unknowing participants of the victim’s family.
- Shunning: Taken to the next level, shunning involves isolation from an entire community. In this case, an organization, religion, or group of friends is both knowingly and unknowingly engaging in the silent treatment. The abuser accomplishes this by going to a group of individuals and spreading lies or rumors about the victim. Usually, the statements demonstrate an inconsistency with the belief system of the group. For instance, the abuser might say to a religious organization that the victim no longer believes in God or that their behavior is not consistent with a believer. This puts the victim in a defensive position where they cannot recover easily.
Understanding the different silent treatment abuse tactics was the beginning of the end for Matt’s relationship with his wife. Once he fully understood how she had manipulated him, his family, and friends, he decided to leave.
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Posted under: abuse Writings from Christine
My ex, and while we were still married.
Sorry to hear that.
Thank you Christine for being so sharing and willing to educate those of us who have been victimized and shamed by these horrible experiences. I appreciate you!
Sherlon
You are so welcome!
Hi. I divorced a narcissistic man after 30 years of marriage. I’ve had learned behaviors and survival methods that I have had to stop doing. I am in a relationship with a man now (for 2 & a half years now) and I struggle with thought of whether or not I am overreacting, responding in ways bc of how I did with my ex, or if this man is a narcissist as well. Our relationship has been rocky. I have broken up with him several times but have always come back. I am 51 years old and I do not want to waste any more of my life. Please help.
Sherrie
It would be best for you to see a counselor in your area.
I am the daughter of a mother who has given the silent treatment many times and has traits of narcissistic behavior. I sometimes don’t talk to her because I need distance. Is this the same type of silent treatment or is this something different?
No, that is boundaries.
Christine,
Thank you for your clarification of how this behavior is abusive. My Excrefuses to communicate with me after years of being divorced. Gave my young adult son (22) a book called The Art of Not Giving a Fu!?$ .Could you please explain how ignoring requests for communication and being ignored over a period of months is a boundary and not silent treatment?
A boundary is openly stated from the beginning, “I’m not going to speak with you about this.”
The silent treatment is trying to control the other person’s behavior by ignoring.
Have you ever considered a few episodes that don’t use the word Narcissist??? I would be interested to play some of these for my covert husband to see his response, but at the same time, I know that’s super unhealthy and pointless….but there is still a part of me trying to “fix him”.