
It’s funny how often your nervous system knows what’s going on in your relationship before your brain catches up. During a pandemic-era romance, I remember the instant a lingering gut feeling turned into an emotional lightbulb moment. I was talking to two friends on a work trip, and it just came bubbling out: “My boyfriend is really horrible to me.”
I look back on that moment now and wonder how I could possibly have missed the signs. For months, he’d avoided me at home. He didn’t want to make plans, and when we ate together, he’d be on his phone the whole time (and snap at me if I pointed it out). He’d be annoyed if I was happy, angry if I cried. I was an inconvenience, an annoyance, a nag. I simply didn’t matter to him.
But the clearer it became to everyone else that this man did not even like me, the more I clung on. “He’s so stressed with work,” I’d say. “He’s going through a tough time with his mental health.” I might as well have ripped my dress and cried, “But daddy I love him!” I was so sure that this was temporary; a rough patch worth fighting through to get back to our regularly scheduled programming of sickening romance and having a laugh together all the time. And yet night after night, I’d end up crying on the overground, in the pub, at a gig, in bed. How did I not see reality? And if he was so sick of me, why didn’t he just end it?
This kind of silent break-up — or, as I’m coining it, subconscious uncoupling — is becoming depressingly common. Spend any amount of time on the r/relationships subreddit and you’ll soon recognise a pattern: someone desperate for advice on what they’re doing wrong is faced with a barrage of comments that say, with varying degrees of tact, ‘Sweetie, this person doesn’t like you.’
Rachel*, 42, has first-hand experience of this. Her relationship was torrid — lots of breaking up and getting back together — but it had survived eight years when she noticed that the vibe had shifted. “It was always me saying, ‘Let’s do something on Saturday’ and he’d be like, ‘Well I’m not sure, I need to check my diary’, then cancelling, and then being a bit aggy — kind of making a point to not agree with me, even when it was something he’d agreed with me on in the past.” But the biggest sign that Rachel’s ex was subconsciously uncoupling was, she says, “the changing communication, the way texts are written, the reply speed. That was the most obvious thing that changed.” And yet, it was months before they would finally split.
Thirty-four-year-old Jeff, too, several months into a relationship, could see the withdrawal begin on Whatsapp, even if he didn’t let himself believe it at the time. “Our messaging went from hourly, to either he would message me in the morning or in the evening,” he recalls. “That was when I felt the first signs — that change in the way we were communicating.” And with that came the lack of proactive plan making, the weird vibe when they’d hang out with other friends, and eventually after weeks came the capital-C Conversation.
It’s difficult to quantify subconscious uncoupling as a behaviour — it’s not exactly easy to summarise or survey, and often it comes with a huge amount of emotional turmoil on both sides. In general, it’s defined by one partner gradually reducing communication, rejecting plans, and pulling away without actually doing the breaking up part. And it seems to be on the rise.
“I see it all the time,” says psychosexual and relationship therapist Lucy Frank, who works with both couples and individuals. She notes that the wood is fiendishly disguised by the trees for a lot of couples. “[The signs of subconscious uncoupling are] so subtle — and so much of it can be explained away. You just don’t want to admit it, you don’t want to necessarily look at it.” He’s having a tough time at work was ringing in my ear. “The majority of my work is helping people to actually express what’s going on underneath that behaviour.”
So what is going on underneath that behaviour? Again, it’s almost impossible to generalise. Some people don’t have the words to articulate what they’re feeling; sometimes it comes down to attachment styles (although Frank warns against putting too much stock in that). “My job is to understand why someone might want to sabotage [their relationship],” continues Frank. “Where does that originate from? Is it something they’ve done in the past that’s been a useful coping strategy, [and so they’re repeating it again]?” Frank suggests that subconscious uncoupling likely stems from a person’s struggle or inability to articulate their emotions and feelings, meaning they find it easier to push them down and withdraw, rather than address them.
If subconscious uncoupling is on the rise, it could be partly down to the dire state of the dating landscape. Starting from scratch in the age of app fatigue and fleeting connections can seem daunting — not to mention that some couples feel locked in by economic pressures. If you live together, splitting up means a difficult house-hunt, sky-rocketing living costs, and potentially endless admin if you’ve bought a property together. When the uncoupling is subconscious, it’s not a reach to suggest that these ambient anxieties could be feeding that feeling that breaking up is just too hard to do.
This slow fade to black can have a major effect on the person being left behind. “I felt really uneasy,” Jeff says. “It immediately put me into a very anxious, insecure place.”
Rachel remembers feeling the same. “It was gut wrenching,” she recalls. “Really sad. He made me doubt myself and how I was conducting myself in the relationship. It made me question everything! My personality; how I looked; if our sex was good. What have I done that’s made him change his mind? I didn’t think it was a ‘him’ problem, I very much thought of it as a ‘me’ problem.”
Break-ups always hurt, but do they hurt as much as a slow death rattle that makes you question your sense of self? It prolongs and complicates the pain you feel as a relationship ends, and can make the recovery take a lot longer too. Though some of my issues are deeper rooted than my own experience of this kind of break up, I’m still working through some of the psychological fallout from it with my own therapist years after the fact. Trust and self-confidence can take years to rebuild.
The subconscious uncoupler is rarely the partner who suggests therapy. More often, it’s the person clinging on who sees couples counselling as a sort of last-ditch effort to get back on track. Dr Amani Zarroug says she often sees people come for therapy after the relationship has ended. The story they tell themselves of the break-up can really change how they recover. “If there’s a lot of, ‘It’s my fault. I could have been different’ — blaming themselves and not recognising the other person’s role — and also not taking responsibility for their own tolerance [of their ex’s behaviour], then the pain of the break-up can go on for a really long time.” So how do you turn that thinking around? “Try to understand that you deserved more — and tolerated a lot less than you deserved.”
Surprisingly, not all subconscious uncouplings end in a total break up. If both parties show up to therapy with a desire to make it work, and are willing to wade through those difficult feelings, Frank says it can all turn around. “If you help to give people the words — which are, ‘I’m not feeling cared for’, ‘I need something else’, or ‘There’s a part of your personality that worries me’ — once you can open up and come from a place of vulnerability, repair is completely possible.” Yes, subconscious uncoupling is often fuelled by an unacknowledged desire for the relationship to end, but sometimes it’s just a manifestation of fears and vulnerabilities that the person withdrawing hasn’t yet faced. But realising that before the relationship is damaged beyond repair can be tricky, especially when it’s all happening subconsciously.
Chloe*, 35, was 18 months into a relationship when she realised she’d been pulling away; that something was making her avoid his touch and leave him on read. She checked out of the relationship well before she did the actual breaking up. Her ex-partner gave her a brutal talking to when she finally did end the relationship. “When we had the break-up conversation, he said it had been punishing,” she explains. “And that he never wanted to feel like that again, and I should never do that to anyone again. And he was of course completely right.” After a period of no-contact, they’re now on decent terms again.
Rachel is also good friends with her ex now, which she puts down to the fact that they broke up in person and gave air to their feelings when they did.
But we don’t all get to voice our pain to the people who have crept away and hoped we’d do the dirty work for us, just as we don’t all get to give the Hinge date that ghosted us after two months a piece of our mind. But if you find yourself subconsciously uncoupled and wondering how the hell this could have happened: try to be kind to yourself. You deserved better.
It’s easier said than done, of course! Unlearning all the negatives you take on when someone you love inexplicably cuts you out is hard work. I’m years out from that particular relationship now, but I’m still in therapy; still trying to remember to be kind to myself. Whether I find love again or not, I know I’ll now bring more self-knowledge and vigilance to any future coupling up. A relationship with another person should be something that lifts you both up rather than dragging either one of you down. Crazy that I forgot that for a minute there — I never will again.
*Names have been changed
Credit: Cosmopolitan