Seems that when he feels like he has got it wrong (failed) he feels cornered and comes out fighting by projecting blame onto you.
When you 'escape" by withdrawing it triggers abandonment which fuels it.
Whatever the reason, abuse is abuse, and physically removing yourself as a boundary enforcement is really the only solid option. This you are obviously finding hard, this is normal, even the best of us default into JADE at times. You have recognized the repeating pattern, so that is a start. From there it is a matter of having a response ready and enact it at first sign before you end up feeling confused and cornered.
Your words are very wise and true. My silence and withdrawal escalate his rage more than anything.
He tried really hard in the end to make it a good night and still go out. It was so convoluted and tense that I don't think either of us made good decisions in advocating for what we need. Him obviously raging, but even retreating from each other would be so much more effective.
He was scared he almost hurt me.
Eventually we went back to that sweet spot. After the tension dies down, we get physically close to calm each other down. Hugging, cuddling, holding hands.
He got frustrated for a moment before bed that I didn't close the door, but it just showed how exhausted all the fighting left him. So I just apologized and back to our baseline.
I need support to recover though. But that's something I do outside the relationship without him.
Thank you