What to do when he/she won’t talk to you.
Assuming you want to chat with them.
© Al Turtle 2005
Amazingly this is a very common occurrence, and there is something you can do. I am particularly familiar with this as I am the kind of guy who can talk with someone about intimate subjects for 60 hours, or more, straight. I can drive everyone crazy, and they didn't use to want to talk with me much. (Also check out my papers on Reliable Membership and on the Testicle Principle.)
Rule: People won't talk cuz they don't feel safe to.
This is a pretty simple and very reliable rule. I suggest you learn it. I have found it helps when I want someone to talk to me and they won't. What is typical for me is to try to push them to talk. I had tried thousands of ways, it seemed. My ways never worked. So finally I accepted the idea that "pushing doesn't work." Of course many of my pushing techniques were very tricky and subtle. Still my partner could instantly see, or feel through me and see my pushing. It just didn't work.
Thus my first task is to start to help them feel safe. I have found this is both very difficult and easy. Making anyone feel anything is pretty near impossible. They will feel what they chose to feel, darn them. Still there are lots of things that trigger a sense of safety in a person. And there are lots of things that tend to make a person feel unsafe. Find 'em. Remove 'em.
So let's look at the situation you are in. Someone won't talk to you. Is it that they won't talk to anyone about anything? Or is it that they won't talk to you, personally? These are very different situations, and you have to ask yourself which it is.
If they won't talk to anyone about anything, it may be quite difficult to get them to talk. Somehow they have probably learned to be unsafe with everyone. Could easily be that this comes directly from when they were little. You have to work to overcome that. It's still possible, just difficult and may take a long time with a lot of patience. (Of course, if this is your partner, you picked them. And this problem is part of your personal challenge in life.)
If they won't talk with just you, I think the situation is easier. Here's the thought. You are doing things or have done things, probably lots of things, that tend to make them feel unsafe. You probably don't know what these things are, but these are actions you "can change." What you are doing does not work for you.
Now, remember, what you do is normal for you. You have to identify what those things are that you do, and learn to replace your behaviors with something better – something that works. Sure this can be difficult, but it is your behavior and therefore you can change it. You have this power. (To understand the issues of Safety, click here for many articles.)
Principle #1: Develop and Demonstrate Patience
Probably the first thing you need is to send the message that "you can wait." That means you need to learn patience. Now before you decide that this is hopeless, just remember that patience is a set of skills. Patience is a learned thing. All children are born "impatient." That's normal. It is also normal for us to learn "patience," when we grow up. It is kind of like learning to tie your shoes laces. But some people have not learned patience — YET.
Patience is the habit of comfort when things don't happen at the pace you desire. Easiest way to learn patience is to spend a large amount of time in a slow situation with people who are already very patient. You can learn it by example. Ask others how they learned it. You can also take courses in Meditation, Yoga, and many east Asia disciplines. Practice it.
I still practice intentionally missing traffic lights. If the light is green, I may slow a little. If it turns yellow, I really try to stop. And then I practice enjoying the "tiny vacation" I get while the light is red.
Principle #2: Invite, instead of Push
This is pretty straight forward. Learn to never ask questions. Invite instead. It sounds like this. "I was wondering about something you did the other day. If you ever figure out what was going on for you when you did that, I'd love to hear about it. In the meantime, let's have dinner." Notice how these are all statements with no question mark at the end of them. Many people feel pushed by questions. Just being asked a question often feels like an attack. So, just don't do it. (To understand the issue of Pushing, click here.)
Principle #3: Gently Listen
Wow, is this one valuable! I suggest you show only moderate eagerness when listening, but invite them to say anything they want. Never interrupt. Never add more questions. Just listen and encourage them to say it all. Accept whatever they say. Never, never, never argue. Learn Mirroring so as to help train yourself to relax while listening to anything they say.

Hello Anonymous, (thanks TC for joining in),
Sounds very rough. I imagine this has been building up for a while. Long distance relationships can be really rocky.
But to your question. My paper (what to do when he/she leaves) is the best starting place. But I've actually written a lot about this problem. My directory of articles (Reliable Membership) is filled with my understandings of this problem and the skills you need to solve it.
In the long run you want to find out if she's “giving you a cold shoulder” as a punishment or as a way for her to survive. The length of time you mention sounds much more like the survival mode. A clue is that you probably (sarcasm) don't want your partner to have to work on survival from you. You want her to feel that being with you is a best way to survive.
One hint is that while you gotta take care of yourself in the present. I've found that is easier to do if you aren't too close to your partner. Take a break from her (I know she is taking a break from you.) but just don't think about her for a couple of weeks. Then check in again with your thinking about her. If she surfaces in the meantime, pay attention to what you've been ignoring until recently.
Good luck. Al
Perhaps you might start with reading Al's article entitled, “When To Fold 'Em?” Pretty much spells it out as far as technique/s. As for this page, it's the theory behind it all and really helps to absorb this first. Good luck! It takes some time (and a lot of practice) to sink in. Did for me anyways.
Hello. I have been reading your site since my partner and I had hit the bumpy roads along a long distance relationship.
I know that you will need more information to approximate what needs to be done in any relationship problem. I don't have the resources to seek therapy or help from you.
But I would just like to ask: How to deal with 'silent treatment'?
She hasn't communicated with me in any form (email, chat, SMS, phone calls) and had refused my phone calls nor responded to my SMS and emails for the last 19 days now.
Certainly that’s a good point of view, Dana. I do think that time lost is lost, and we’re all alloted only so much time. I wish I had learned my lessons perhaps 25 years earlier. Sad to think of all that wasted life. Very glad I finally got serious and learned the skills I didn’t even know I was missing. I do encourage people to make their own choices and decisions.
I think it is tricky to give advice to people who are right on the edge of deciding to give up a relationship. You might have noticed that I err on the side of encouraging people to work it out. My belief is that people who come here, to my site, are usually those who are drawn by the dream of a great relationship in their lives. I fully believe that it is perfectly fine to decide to “give up.” Life sometimes makes that decision easy… sometimes not.
Hey Al,
Thanks for this article. I was just wondering whether this is applicable to ex boyfriends/girlfriends who have dumped oneself? Some people say that ex boyfriends/girlfriends don't initiate contact or reply because its a pride issue or a guilt issue for dumping oneself. What do you think?
Furthermore, I have initiated minimal contact with my ex-girlfriend over the course of a month (2 times very briefly this includes the e-mail below) and recently I have sent her the following e-mail:
“Hey,
Please excuse my intrusion. I wanted to mention that I hope you know that you can get in touch anytime. Be it today or in a year 🙂
All the best. Take Care. ”
I think that displays that I wouldn't mind contact and that I have patience but I'm not sure whether I've pushed her away or is this e-mail inviting?
Cheers,
ThePupil
good advice thanks i needed help today