Why Your Partner Won't Talk (And How to Fix It)
TL;DR : Stonewalling, identified by psychologist John Gottman as the fourth horseman of relationship breakdown, occurs when one partner emotionally and physically withdraws during conflict by refusing to respond, avoiding eye contact, and leaving conversations. Men practice stonewalling in approximately 85 percent of cases because they experience emotional overwhelm more quickly and require longer cardiovascular recovery times. During stonewalling, the withdrawing partner's body enters survival mode with elevated heart rate, cortisol, and adrenaline, reducing reasoning abilities rather than indicating indifference or lack of care. This behavior triggers a destructive pursuer-distancer dynamic where the speaking partner intensifies their demands in response to silence, causing the stonewaller to withdraw further. Breaking this cycle requires the pursuing partner to suggest structured breaks, acknowledge the pattern without judgment, lower conversation intensity, and return when both parties are calm. Those who stonewall should recognize their physiological overwhelm, communicate their need for a break explicitly, and engage in soothing activities before resuming discussion. Understanding stonewalling as emotional survival rather than deliberate rejection transforms frustration into empathy and enables more constructive dialogue that respects each person's emotional capacity.
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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Take the test →Conclusion
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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