"The popular read on the quiet person in the argument is that they have achieved some kind of emotional mastery; non-reactive, regulated, a Zen thing. The assumption is that the stillness reflects an internal state that matches the external one."
"What is actually happening, in a great many cases, is a cost-benefit analysis so old and so automatic that the person running it no longer experiences it as a decision. They ran the numbers the first few hundred times."
"The ache was cheaper, so they paid the ache. Then they paid it again. Then a thousand more times. And at some point the ache stopped registering as a price at all, because the body got used to the transaction."
Silence during arguments is frequently misinterpreted as emotional control. Instead, it often stems from an automated cost-benefit analysis. Individuals may have previously calculated that speaking up leads to conflict, while remaining silent results in a manageable discomfort. Over time, this discomfort becomes normalized, and the individual no longer perceives it as a cost. The ongoing transaction of silence versus expression continues without conscious awareness, revealing a deeper mechanism at play in interpersonal dynamics.
Read at Silicon Canals
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]