Maplewood Counseling

When Closeness Fades: Understanding Withholding in Relationships

 

When Closeness Fades: Understanding Withholding in Relationships

A healthy relationship thrives on a current of connection, openness, and mutual support. It’s a space where you feel safe to share your thoughts, feelings, and even your finances. But what happens when that current is blocked? When one partner begins to deliberately hold back affection, emotions, or resources, it’s known as withholding. This behavior can create a chilling distance, slowly eroding trust and leaving the other partner feeling lonely and confused.

Withholding isn’t just about having a bad day or needing some personal space. It’s a persistent pattern of restriction. It can be as overt as controlling all the household finances or as subtle as consistently giving the silent treatment. While the behavior itself is damaging, the reasons behind it are often complex, rooted in fear, past trauma, or learned patterns that once served as a form of protection.

Understanding why withholding happens is the first step toward healing the disconnect. Whether you are the one pulling away or the one feeling left in the cold, exploring these dynamics can help you find a path back to the warmth and intimacy you both deserve.

The Different Faces of Withholding

Withholding can manifest in several key areas of a relationship, each creating its own unique brand of pain and disconnection. Recognizing these patterns is crucial for addressing the root cause.

Financial Withholding

Money often represents security, freedom, and partnership. When one person controls all financial resources, it creates a significant power imbalance. This might look like:

  • Making all financial decisions unilaterally.
  • Hiding bank accounts or secret debt.
  • Putting a partner on a strict “allowance.”
  • Preventing a partner from working or accessing shared funds.

Financial withholding can make the restricted partner feel trapped and powerless, stripping away their sense of autonomy and safety. It’s a breach of trust that can make the future of the relationship feel incredibly insecure.

Emotional Withholding

This form of withholding can be incredibly subtle but profoundly damaging. It’s the emotional equivalent of the silent treatment. It includes:

  • Refusing to share feelings or be vulnerable.
  • Shutting down during conversations about the relationship.
  • Withdrawing emotional support during difficult times.
  • Being physically present but emotionally absent.

Humans are wired for emotional connection. When a partner consistently withholds empathy, warmth, and validation, it leaves the other person feeling isolated, rejected, and deeply alone within the relationship itself.

Physical Withholding

Physical touch is a fundamental way we express love and connection. When it’s withheld, the relationship can feel barren. This isn’t just about sex; it includes all forms of affection, like hugs, kisses, and hand-holding. Withholding becomes a problem when:

  • Affection is used as a tool for reward or punishment.
  • Touch is only offered when the withholding partner gets their way.
  • There is a consistent and unexplained withdrawal of all physical intimacy.

When affection becomes transactional, it creates anxiety and resentment. The rejected partner may feel they have to “earn” basic human warmth, which damages both their self-worth and the foundation of the relationship.

10 Reasons People Withhold in a Relationship

Withholding is rarely about a simple lack of generosity. More often, it is a protective shield built from past experiences and deep-seated fears.

  1. Fear of Vulnerability: Many people learn from a young age that opening up leads to hurt or rejection. They withhold to protect themselves, even from a safe and loving partner.
  2. A Need for Power and Control: For some, withholding is a way to maintain dominance. By controlling resources or affection, they feel more powerful and less anxious.
  3. Unresolved Past Trauma: Betrayal in a previous relationship, like infidelity or abandonment, can create deep-seated trust issues that lead to protective walls.
  4. Learned Family Dynamics: We often repeat the relationship patterns we observed in our families. If a parent was withholding, it may feel like a normal, albeit dysfunctional, way to relate.
  5. Low Self-Esteem: Individuals who feel unworthy of love may withhold affection or emotion, subconsciously believing their partner will eventually leave them anyway.
  6. As a Form of Punishment: When someone feels hurt or angry but lacks the skills to communicate directly, they may use withholding to passively punish their partner.
  7. Mental Health Challenges: Conditions like depression, anxiety, or PTSD can make emotional and physical intimacy feel overwhelming, leading to unintentional withdrawal.
  8. Fear of Losing Independence: Some people equate sharing fully with losing themselves. They withhold to maintain a sense of autonomy and personal identity.
  9. Lack of Emotional Skills: Not everyone is taught how to express feelings in a healthy way. Withholding may be a coping mechanism born from a lack of emotional literacy.
  10. Mismatched Expectations: Couples may have fundamentally different ideas about money, emotional expression, or physical intimacy, leading to one partner withholding when their unspoken expectations aren’t met.

Finding Your Way Back to Connection

Chronic withholding starves a relationship of the trust and communication it needs to survive. The person on the receiving end often develops anxiety and self-doubt, while the person withholding misses out on true intimacy. Fortunately, these patterns can be changed.

Breaking free begins with open and honest communication. It requires courage from both partners to explore the “why” behind the behavior without blame or judgment. For the person who withholds, it means acknowledging the impact of their actions and taking steps to address their underlying fears. For the partner who feels rejected, it means setting clear boundaries around their needs.

A Safe Space for All Relationships

Navigating these challenges requires a safe, affirming environment where both partners feel seen and heard. True connection can only be rebuilt on a foundation of trust and mutual respect. At Maplewood Counseling, we provide inclusive care for people of all races, cultures, and backgrounds, including interfaith, interracial, BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, and blended families. Our therapists bring lived experiences and specialized training to create a supportive space for you to heal and grow, both as individuals and as a couple. You do not have to solve this alone.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: My partner says I’m imagining it, but I feel them pulling away. What should I do?
A: Trust your feelings. Emotional and physical withholding can be subtle, and it’s a form of gaslighting for your partner to deny your reality. Try to express how their actions make you feel using “I” statements (e.g., “I feel lonely when we don’t talk in the evenings”). If the behavior continues, it may be time to suggest professional help.

Q: I think I’m the one who is withholding. How can I stop?
A: Acknowledging this is a huge and brave first step. Start by trying to identify the feeling behind your behavior. Are you scared? Angry? Overwhelmed? Try sharing one small feeling with your partner each day. Individual therapy can be incredibly helpful in uncovering the root cause of this protective pattern.

Q: Is it withholding if my partner just doesn’t want sex as often as I do?
A: A simple mismatch in libido is not necessarily withholding. It becomes withholding when sex and affection are deliberately used as a tool for control or punishment, or when there is a complete withdrawal of all physical intimacy without explanation or willingness to discuss it.

Q: Can a relationship recover from years of withholding?
A: Yes, but it requires commitment from both partners. The longer the pattern has existed, the more entrenched it becomes. Couples therapy is highly recommended to help you safely unpack the underlying issues, learn new communication skills, and slowly rebuild the trust that has been eroded.

Q: How do I know if it’s withholding or just a normal rough patch?
A: Rough patches are temporary and often tied to a specific stressor. Withholding is a chronic, persistent pattern of behavior that doesn’t resolve on its own. If you feel a consistent sense of distance, rejection, or control in your relationship, it’s likely more than just a rough patch.

Helpful Resources