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You're in the middle of an argument, and then... you just go blank.
The words are gone. Your thoughts won't line up. Your partner is still talking, still waiting, still looking at you for a response. And you're just… sitting there. Offline. You haven't left. You haven't stopped caring. But you can't move, and you can't explain that, and the longer the silence stretches the worse it looks.
Later — an hour, a few hours, a day — the words finally come back. But by then your partner has already decided what your silence meant. They think you checked out. They think you don't care. And you couldn't care more.
Today, I'm going to tell you exactly what happened in your brain during that moment. And it's not what you've been told. It's not stonewalling. It's not avoidance. It's not proof that you're bad at relationships. It's a nervous system doing exactly what it's wired to do under stress.
And here's the part most couples therapists miss: ADHD shutdown and autistic shutdown look almost identical from the outside — but inside, they're two completely different processes. Once you can tell them apart, conflict stops feeling like it's entirely your fault and you will actually have a plan to navigate it in a way that supports your natural wiring.
IN THIS EPISODE
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
LOVED THIS EPISODE? Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the partner, friend, or person who has shut down in a fight and never had the words to explain why.
CONNECT
A NOTE This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.
By Jenna DaltonYou're in the middle of an argument, and then... you just go blank.
The words are gone. Your thoughts won't line up. Your partner is still talking, still waiting, still looking at you for a response. And you're just… sitting there. Offline. You haven't left. You haven't stopped caring. But you can't move, and you can't explain that, and the longer the silence stretches the worse it looks.
Later — an hour, a few hours, a day — the words finally come back. But by then your partner has already decided what your silence meant. They think you checked out. They think you don't care. And you couldn't care more.
Today, I'm going to tell you exactly what happened in your brain during that moment. And it's not what you've been told. It's not stonewalling. It's not avoidance. It's not proof that you're bad at relationships. It's a nervous system doing exactly what it's wired to do under stress.
And here's the part most couples therapists miss: ADHD shutdown and autistic shutdown look almost identical from the outside — but inside, they're two completely different processes. Once you can tell them apart, conflict stops feeling like it's entirely your fault and you will actually have a plan to navigate it in a way that supports your natural wiring.
IN THIS EPISODE
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
LOVED THIS EPISODE? Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the partner, friend, or person who has shut down in a fight and never had the words to explain why.
CONNECT
A NOTE This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.