There is a story behind every reaction.
What appears to others as stubbornness, indifference, or emotional distance is often something much more complicated. Sometimes, our present behavior is not born in the present at all. It is a shadow cast by experiences from years ago.
For a long time, I did not understand this about myself.
During my school days, I fell in love.
Like many first loves, it was intense, emotional, and all-consuming. We spent years together. What began as teenage affection slowly became a major part of my life. Eight years is a long time. Long enough for habits to form. Long enough for the mind to learn survival mechanisms without even realizing it.
She was a good person in many ways, but she had one characteristic that defined much of our relationship.
She was extremely short-tempered.
Arguments would erupt over the smallest things. A delayed reply. A misunderstood sentence. A forgotten promise. Things that might seem insignificant to an outsider could suddenly become the center of a heated fight.
At first, I tried explaining myself.
Then I tried defending myself.
Then I tried arguing back.
None of it seemed to help.
Over time, I unconsciously discovered a strategy that appeared to work better than everything else.
Silence.
Whenever a fight started, I would simply stop talking.
I would withdraw into myself.
I would wait.
I would let the storm pass.
And eventually, almost every single time, she would calm herself down. After some time, she would come back and start talking again. The relationship would return to normal as if nothing had happened.
This pattern repeated itself hundreds and thousands of times over eight years.
Fight.
Silence.
Cooling down.
Reconnection.
Again and again.
Without knowing it, my mind was learning a lesson.
It was learning that silence was the safest response to conflict.
Not because I wanted to punish anyone.
Not because I wanted to manipulate anyone.
But because experience had taught me that speaking during a conflict only made things worse.
So I stopped speaking.
And my brain rewarded that behavior because it seemed to work.
Years passed.
The relationship ended.
Life moved forward.
Eventually, I got married.
I believed I had left the past behind.
What I did not realize was that the relationship had left something behind inside me.
The pattern.
The conditioning.
The automatic response.
Today, when disagreements happen in my marriage, something old wakes up inside me.
The moment voices rise, my mind instinctively reaches for the same strategy it learned years ago.
Silence.
I become quiet.
I stop responding.
I withdraw into myself.
Not because I want to hurt my wife.
Not because I want to win an argument.
Not because I think she is wrong.
In fact, many times I am not even consciously choosing silence.
It simply happens.
It is almost automatic.
Like a reflex.
The way someone immediately pulls their hand away from a hot surface.
The way someone closes their eyes when something flies toward their face.
My silence is not a weapon.
It is an old defense mechanism.
A habit built through years of repetition.
Unfortunately, my wife sees it differently.
And honestly, I understand why.
From her perspective, it can look like I am ignoring her.
It can look like I do not care.
It can look like I am intentionally refusing to communicate.
It can even feel disrespectful.
If I were in her position, perhaps I might feel the same or even more.
Because she cannot see the old memories that are silently influencing my reactions.
She only sees the silence itself.
And silence, when misunderstood, can be painful.
That realization has been one of the most important lessons of my marriage.
I used to think that because my intentions were good, my actions would automatically be understood.
But relationships do not work that way.
People experience our actions, not our intentions.
My intention may be self-protection.
But her experience may be abandonment.
My intention may be avoiding escalation.
But her experience may be emotional distance.
Neither of us is necessarily wrong.
We are simply standing on different sides of the same moment.
The older I grow, the more I understand that human beings are collections of old stories.
Some stories become memories.
Some become habits.
And some become invisible scripts that continue directing our behavior years after the original chapter has ended.
My silence is one such script.
It was written during my first love.
But it continued playing during my marriage.
Recognizing this does not excuse my behavior.
Nor does it make anyone else responsible for it.
But it helps explain it.
And understanding is often the first step toward change.
Today, I am trying to become more aware of these patterns.
I am learning that conflict does not always need silence.
I am learning that not every disagreement is the same as the ones I experienced years ago.
I am learning that my wife is not my past.
Most importantly, I am learning that love sometimes requires us to unlearn the very things that once protected us.
Because what helped us survive one relationship may not help us nurture another.
The boy who learned silence during his first love believed he was keeping the peace.
The man in the marriage is slowly discovering that peace is not always found in silence.
Sometimes, peace is found in staying present, speaking gently, and allowing yourself to be heard.
And perhaps that is the chapter I am learning to write now.
*DhineshMaya*