Drawn to the Closed Door
I’ve come to understand something about myself, and it’s both painful and clarifying:
I gravitate toward people who use silence as a weapon. Stonewalling—cold, controlled, absolute silence—is a dynamic I know intimately. It’s the language of withdrawal I’ve been trained to translate as love.
Even now, with every resource and insight and therapy under my belt, the discard silence doesn’t hurt any less. I know it’s not love. Not the wholesome, sustaining, and sustainable safe kind of love.
I know the kind of closeness I long for—deep, mutual, and safe—is only possible with someone who meets conflict with curiosity, courage, and a genuine desire to understand, de‑escalate, and reconnect. Someone who can both hear and express hard truths with love.
Stonewalling says so many things without saying a single word:
You’re not worth responding to. Your pain doesn’t move me. I’ll withhold presence until you behave the way I want. I am in control. You are not.