Silent Treatment: Preferred Weapon of People with Narcissism

couple crisisFor those in or getting out of a romantic relationship with a self-absorbed individual, the silent treatment can feel like a punishment worse than death.

Why Narcissistic People Use the Silent Treatment

The silent treatment is a form of emotional abuse typically employed by people with narcissistic tendencies. It is designed to (1) place the abuser in a position of control; (2) silence the target’s attempts at assertion; (3) avoid conflict resolution/personal responsibility/compromise; or (4) punish the target for a perceived ego slight. Often, the result of the silent treatment is exactly what the person with narcissism wishes to create: a reaction from the target and a sense of control.

The target, who may possess high emotional intelligence, empathy, conflict-resolution skills, and the ability to compromise, may work diligently to respond to the deafening silence. He or she may frequently reach out to the narcissistic person via email, phone, or text to resolve greatly inflated misunderstandings, and is typically met with continued disdain, contempt, and silence. Essentially, the narcissistic person’s message is one of extreme disapproval to the degree that the silence renders the target so insignificant that he or she is ignored and becomes more or less nonexistent in the eyes of the narcissistic person.

Emotional Maturity of a Typical Narcissistic Person

The emotional maturity of a typical narcissistic person is akin to a 5-year-old child who pouts and refuses to play with a friend in the sandbox because the friend wants to share the pail and shovel. The 5-year-old refuses to talk with the friend and angrily storms off to play on the jungle gym with someone else. The bewildered child with the pail and shovel may feel confused, rejected, and may not understand why they can’t share. He or she just wanted to build a sand castle together.

Because no further communication can ensue unless and until the narcissistic person decides to give the target another chance, a false sense of control is nurtured. Often, the narcissistic person will demand that the target apologizes for whatever inflated transgression the target may have committed (the target may have set a limit or asserted a boundary against emotional abuse, for example). Sometimes, a person with narcissistic qualities will decide to abandon and discard the relationship when his or her partner presents an ultimatum or attempts resolution requiring compromise. The person with narcissism may prefer to end the relationship and start over rather than be in a position of potential abandonment. The 5-year-old storms off and plays with a new, innocent target on the swing set. It is too much work to share the pail and shovel.

How to Deal With the Silent Treatment

So how does one deal with the silent treatment from a person with narcissism? For those leaving a toxic relationship with such an individual, many therapists suggest that the survivor understands that the person with narcissism has not developed the ability to express a high level of empathy, reciprocity, and compromise. The silent treatment is a form of emotional abuse that no one deserves nor should tolerate. If an individual experiences this absence of communication, it is a sure sign that he or she needs to move on and heal.

The healing process can feel like mourning the loss of a relationship that did not really exist and was one-way in favor of the ego-massaging person with narcissism. The minute the partner disagrees with the narcissistic person or asserts his or her healthy boundaries, the narcissistic person deploys an arsenal of abuse tactics. The silent treatment is a favorite weapon.

Do not accept emotional abuse. Know that you are worthy of a healthy relationship with someone who can communicate in a mature, emotionally healthy manner. Play with someone who has the ability to share the shovel and pail. You deserve no less.

© Copyright 2020 GoodTherapy.org. All rights reserved. Permission to publish granted by Andrea Schneider, LCSW, Learning Difficulties Topic Expert Contributor

The preceding article was solely written by the author named above. Any views and opinions expressed are not necessarily shared by GoodTherapy.org. Questions or concerns about the preceding article can be directed to the author or posted as a comment below.

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  • Toria

    June 2nd, 2014 at 2:58 PM

    Reading this allowed me to recognize that what I have suspected for a long time now is true- my boyfriend uses the silent treatment against me as a weapon. He can say all he wants that he doesn’t, that he is just working things out in his own head, but I clearly see him doing the things that you talk about here, mainly that this act takes away any chance for me to defend myself or to voice my concerns and own anger because he will not respond in any way. It is passive aggressive but it is also so juvenile. I think that it’s time to tell someone to grow up or get out.

  • Janice A

    July 5th, 2016 at 3:25 PM

    Thank u for your clear and concise article re The Silent Treatment & Narcissists. Unfortunately the abuser in my case is my 37 yo daughter. She started punishing me when I was admitted to ICU and almost died from renal failure. She was great while I was in the hospital but when my health prevented me from returning to nursing and disability meant an extreme cut in my income, she withdrew and stopped accepting or returning phone calls, texts or emails. I was very ill and on my own and could no longer manage until I got my strength back. She was cruel. I asked many times why she was treating me like this. She never had an answer. Even the death of my mother didnt change her attitude. Its been 4 years. I meditate and focus on lìving my life without her. The pain is overwhelming sometimes.

  • CHERYL

    July 27th, 2016 at 10:16 AM

    This information helps when dealing with a person like this. I work in a small office (2) people and I’ve put up with this for 5 years. If she wants something she will speak to you. The rest of the time she has nothing to say and she attacks you if you dare to speak to her. Very helpful to deal with this mess.

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