Stonewalling: When Your Partner Retreats into Silence
You try to discuss an important issue and your partner freezes: blank stare, arms crossed, total silence. Or they stand up and leave the room without a word. This behavior, which John Gottman calls stonewalling, is the fourth horseman of the marital apocalypse — and one of the most frustrating for the person experiencing it.
What is stonewalling?
Stonewalling refers to the emotional and physical withdrawal of a partner during a conflictual interaction. The person stops responding, avoids eye contact, and gives the impression of no longer being "present."
Gottman observed that stonewalling is practiced in 85% of cases by men. This is no accident: research shows that men reach the threshold of emotional overwhelm (flooding) more quickly and that their cardiovascular system takes longer to recover.
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Prendre RDV en visioséanceWhat happens physiologically
Behind the stonewaller's apparent indifference, their body is in emergency mode:
- Heart rate above 100 bpm (diffuse physiological arousal)
- Elevated cortisol and adrenaline
- Reduced reasoning abilities
- Activation of the sympathetic nervous system (survival mode)
Why is stonewalling so destructive?
For the person speaking, stonewalling is interpreted as:
- "You don't care about me"
- "My emotions don't matter"
- "You're punishing me with silence"
The pursuer-distancer dynamic
Gottman's research describes a typical scenario:How to respond if your partner is stonewalling
What not to do
- Follow them from room to room
- Raise your voice to "force them to react"
- Issue ultimatums out of frustration
- Interpret the silence as deliberate contempt
What works
- Suggest a structured break: "I can see this is difficult. Can we take a 30-minute break and come back to it?"
- Name the pattern without judgment: "We're in our usual pattern. I suggest we do things differently."
- Lower the intensity: soften your tone, use "I" statements instead of "you"
- Come back later: the important issue deserves to be addressed when both are available
If you're the one stonewalling
- Recognize that your body is overwhelmed, not that you "don't care"
- Verbalize: "I need a break. I'm not running away. I'll be back in 20 minutes."
- During the break, do a soothing activity (walking, breathing exercises, music)
- Come back systematically to finish the conversation
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Stonewalling is not indifference — it's emotional overwhelm. Understanding this mechanism transforms frustration into empathy and opens the door to dialogue that respects each person's pace. A break is not an escape: it's a condition for authentic communication.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist🧪 Online test
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To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
Rethinking Infidelity - Esther Perel | TEDTEDRetrouvez cet article sur le site principal avec des ressources complementaires.
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