If you’ve ever found yourself saying,
“Why won’t you just talk to me?”
or wondering why your partner seems to shut down the moment conflict begins, you’re not alone.
One of the most common relationship dynamics I see in my therapy office is the pursuer–withdrawer cycle. One partner wants to talk things through immediately. The other needs space before they can engage.
Unfortunately, the withdrawer usually gets cast as the villain.
They’re labeled:
Sometimes those labels fit.
But many times, they don’t.
My dad recently came to visit, and like every visit, he quickly became my unofficial handyman.
A leaky faucet.
A fresh coat of paint.
A few household projects I’d been meaning to tackle.
As I watched him work, I noticed something.
He didn’t immediately reach for a screwdriver.
He didn’t start taking things apart.
He stood quietly.
He looked at the problem from different angles.
He paused.
Only after he understood what was happening did he begin fixing it.
It reminded me of something I see in relationships every day.
Some people process externally.
Others process internally.
Neither approach is inherently wrong.
They’re simply different.
Attachment theory helps explain why conflict feels so different from one person to the next.
Someone with a more anxious attachment style often experiences distance as a threat to the relationship. Their nervous system says, “We need to fix this now so I know we’re okay.”
Someone with a more avoidant attachment style often experiences emotional intensity as overwhelming. Their nervous system says, “I need to settle down before I can think clearly.”
Notice something important:
Neither partner is trying to create distance.
Both are trying to create safety.
They’re simply using different strategies.
One reaches for connection.
The other reaches for regulation.
The problem isn’t that either strategy exists.
It’s what happens when those strategies collide.
Imagine this conversation:
One partner says,
“Can we talk about what happened earlier?”
The other hesitates.
The first partner notices the hesitation and thinks,
“They’re avoiding me.”
So they ask again—maybe with a little more urgency.
The withdrawer now feels pressure.
Their thoughts become foggy.
Their heart rate increases.
They worry they’ll say something they’ll regret.
So they become quieter.
The pursuer interprets the silence as rejection.
So they push harder.
The withdrawer retreats even further.
Neither person is trying to hurt the other.
Yet both end up feeling misunderstood.
This is why so many couples say they’re having the same argument over and over again.
They’re not fighting about the dishes.
Or the finances.
Or the in-laws.
They’re reacting to each other’s nervous systems.
Many withdrawers aren’t silent because they don’t care.
They’re silent because they care enough not to respond impulsively.
They’re trying to:
The irony is that the more they’re rushed, the harder that becomes.
Of course, this doesn’t mean disappearing for days or refusing difficult conversations is healthy.
Withdrawing becomes problematic when space turns into avoidance.
Healthy withdrawal has a return time.
It sounds like:
“I want to talk about this. I just need thirty minutes to gather my thoughts.”
That’s very different from shutting down indefinitely.
If you’re the partner who likes to resolve conflict quickly, consider this:
Silence isn’t always rejection.
Sometimes it’s processing.
Sometimes your partner is doing emotional work you simply can’t see.
Giving someone space doesn’t mean giving up on the conversation.
It means respecting the way their brain processes stress.
If you’re the quieter partner, remember that your silence communicates something—even when you don’t intend it to.
Without reassurance, your partner is likely filling in the blanks.
And our brains rarely fill in blanks with optimistic stories.
A simple sentence can make an enormous difference:
“I’m not pulling away from you. I just need a little time before we talk.”
That small reassurance can calm your partner’s nervous system enough to make the later conversation much more productive.
One of the biggest myths in relationships is that successful couples communicate in identical ways.
They don’t.
Healthy couples learn to understand each other’s operating systems.
The pursuer learns not to mistake every pause for rejection.
The withdrawer learns that silence without reassurance often feels painful to the person they love.
Neither person has to abandon who they are.
They simply learn to translate.
Because underneath almost every pursuer is someone asking,
“Can you show me we’re okay?”
And underneath almost every withdrawer is someone quietly saying,
“Give me a minute, and I’ll come back.”
When couples learn to hear those deeper messages instead of reacting to the surface behaviors, everything begins to change.
The healthiest relationships aren’t built by deciding whose communication style is right.
They’re built by becoming fluent in each other’s.
To your thriving relationship,
April