After You Go Quiet: How to Repair When You’ve Withdrawn

You went quiet. Maybe for hours, maybe days. Now you’re coming back — and you don’t know how to re-enter the relationship without making things worse.

Repair after withdrawal is one of the most challenging skills in avoidant attachment work. It requires doing something that the avoidant nervous system finds deeply uncomfortable: vulnerability without an exit.

Why coming back is hard

Part of the difficulty is shame. Knowing that you disappeared — that you left someone hanging in the silence — can create a kind of paralysis. The longer you’ve been gone, the harder re-entry feels.

Another part is the fear of what you’ll find on the other side. Will they be angry? Hurt? Will you have to manage their feelings? Will opening the door flood you again with exactly the intensity that made you close it?

A simple re-entry

Repair doesn’t require a grand explanation. Often what the other person most needs is simply acknowledgement: “I got overwhelmed and I went away. I’m back now. That wasn’t fair to you, and I’m sorry.”

You don’t have to dissect every layer of your psychology before you can come back. A simple, honest acknowledgement of what happened — without defensiveness — is almost always enough to begin.

The Attachment Base
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