Silent treatment is abuse!I read this a lot lately. Is this always true or is it more complicated than this?  :)o we need a deeper, more emotionally balanced understanding.
Here is an essay:
https://bpdfamily.org/2008/07/silent-treatment-when-your-partner-acts.htmlI think its fair to say that silent treatment is not always intentional abuse. It can simply be coping (escaping). It can also be manipulation. Regardless of the driving force, it is most often hurtful to the receiver and so it is easy to see why we think it is always abuse.
No contact is not always intentional abuse, as we all know. It is often coping (avoidance - space to heal). There is a parallel here. It can also be manipulation - and regardless, it is also hurtful to the receiver, if the receiver is trying to reach out. Thoughts of severing contact often come as a response to periods of extreme frustration and/or hopelessness and so its easy to see why many of us see it as healthy coping.
We (bpdfamily) doesn't recommend either of these methods as
first choice for dealing with other people. There is a practical, not altruistic reason. They are conflict. They tend to trigger abandonment anxieties, rejection anxieties, feeling of disrespect and worthiness, and shame - on
both sides of the relationship.
But clearly, at times, severing all contact necessary. The only point of talking about this here is to encourage members to weigh the tradeoffs of the benefit of space vs the separation anxiety. If you think about it as it relates to your, it should be clear.
We recommend that if you are on the receiving side of severed contact, that it is best to depersonalize it as much as possible as it may be about the other person coping (not aimed at you) or it may be a cheap shot (and you shouldn't take it as more than what it is). The best way to handle being cut off is to not fight it. Fighting it often rewards / enables it.
No Contact - If the relationship has ended (the partner says done) and I stop initiating contact, this is normal. I'm
not even sure why anyone call this no contact. Its really
ending pursuit. If I contact the partner in this case, I'm really boundary busting. We need to respect "I want out".
It only really becomes NC when I don't respond to the other persons attempts to contact me. If I do this to manipulate, punish or control, this is abusive. If I do it to detach and I'm committed to moving on, while it still might feel abusive to the receiver, I can justify it for my own mental health.
Controlled contact is an easier alternative - simply taking the incoming call and
keeping it light - staying away from the emotional aspects of the relationship. It's weaning the parties off of one another. Don't use a sledgehammer if a screwdriver will work.
Don't set yourself up to fail - take the the path that most fits your situation and your psyche. And when advising others, don't tell them what to do, tell them understand and analyze the tradeoffs.
Silent Treatment - If some one needs space and takes it, it's reasonable. If you reach out to them and they respond "I need space" - we should give it. This becomes abusive when the other person shuts us down to manipulate, punish or control us.