Episode #80: Your Spouse Isn't Mad—They're Silent. Here's Why.
In this solo episode, I'm pulling back the curtain on something that happened between my husband and me on our recent vacation in Mexico—a moment so small, so ordinary, that you might miss it entirely. But this is exactly the kind of moment that quietly erodes long-term relationships without anyone noticing until the distance has already set in. This episode isn't about arguing better or fixing dramatic conflicts. It's about something far more subtle and far more common: what happens when one person moves ahead with a decision and the other falls silent. No raised voices. No obvious tension. Just... quiet. And that quiet? It's not indifference. It's resignation. I'll walk you through: ✅ The real story of our last night in Mexico and the decision I made that shut my husband down ✅ Why I interpreted his silence as neutrality when it was actually withdrawal ✅ How women's efficiency and decisiveness can unintentionally crowd out their partner's voice ✅ Why men often wait to see if their perspective will be invited rather than stating what they want ✅ The childhood patterns that collide in these ordinary moments—and why my mom's "waste nothing" rule almost ruined our evening ✅ What to do when you realize your partner has gone quiet (hint: don't analyze, justify, or criticize) ✅ Why patience and humility—not perfect communication—are what actually save marriages ✅ The stabilizing power of staying present without becoming cold when distance creeps in Here's what I learned: most communication breakdowns don't begin with words. They begin much earlier—when one person moves too quickly and the other falls quiet behind. And in long-term relationships, especially those 25+ years in, we think we know our spouse so well that we stop slowing down enough to actually check. I made a decision about dinner that seemed completely reasonable to me. We had plenty of food at the condo. Why waste it? But what I didn't see—what I couldn't see because I was moving too fast—was that for him, this was our last night. He'd worked hard all year. He never asks for much. And he wanted to go out. The tragedy? If he had just said, "This is our last night. It's special to me. I'd really like to go out," I would have dealt with my food-waste anxiety and gone. Gladly. But he didn't say it. And I didn't slow down enough to ask. This episode is for every couple who thinks their communication problems need to look dramatic to matter. They don't. The most damaging moments are often the quietest ones—the ones where nothing concrete seems wrong, but something is suddenly... off. 🔔 Remember: Marriage isn't built on perfect communication. It's built on patience, humility, and the willingness to yield to the small things before they grow into larger ones. Slow down. Notice the quiet. Give your spouse room to speak—and mean it when you ask.
From "The Luella Jonk Show"
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