We’re far from it if we think only abusive people exhibit these patterns. No. These are reflexes. Reactions baked in by stress, insecurity, or simply never learning how to argue without losing ourselves.
Understanding the Roots: Where Toxic Behaviours Come From
Let’s be clear about this—no one wakes up and thinks, “Today I’ll be toxic.” These behaviours grow from something deeper. They’re survival tactics gone rogue. A childhood where emotions were punished. A workplace culture that rewards aggression. A brain wired to respond to threat, even when no real danger exists. Gottman didn’t pull these four out of thin air. His team studied over 3,000 couples, tracking heart rates, facial expressions, and language patterns. From that data, they found something startling: they could predict divorce with 93% accuracy by observing just one 15-minute conversation. That’s not magic. That’s pattern recognition.
And we all have blind spots. You might think you’re just “speaking honestly,” while your partner hears relentless judgment. Or you might retreat into silence to avoid conflict, not realizing you’re delivering emotional abandonment.
Criticism: When Feedback Becomes Assault
Criticism isn’t the same as constructive feedback. Feedback targets behaviour: “I felt ignored when you didn’t respond to my text.” Criticism attacks character: “You never listen. You’re so selfish.” See the difference? One points to an action. The other brands a person. That shift—from “you did something bad” to “you are bad”—is where trust begins to crumble. People don’t think about this enough: once someone internalizes being “the problem,” they stop trying. Why fix yourself if you’re fundamentally flawed?
And it’s not just about tone. A sarcastic smile, a sigh mid-sentence, even a raised eyebrow can carry the weight of condemnation. I find this overrated, by the way—the idea that if you “just speak calmly,” everything’s fine. Delivery matters, yes. But if your core message is, “You’re deficient,” no vocal softness can save it.
Contempt: The Poison in the Well
This is the worst of the four. Hands down. Contempt isn’t just anger. It’s superiority. It’s the smirk. The mocking nickname. The eye roll that says, “I can’t believe I’m related to you.” Gottman called it the single greatest predictor of divorce. Not conflict. Contempt. Because conflict assumes equality. Contempt assumes you’re above someone. It strips them of dignity.
It shows up in language, too. Backhanded compliments (“Wow, you actually cleaned the kitchen!”), impersonations, even jokes at someone’s expense among friends. The problem is, once contempt takes root, repair becomes nearly impossible. You stop seeing the person. You see a caricature. A collection of flaws. And that’s exactly where the relationship starts dying—even if you’re still sharing a bed or a boardroom.
Defensiveness and Stonewalling: The Twin Escapes from Accountability
Defensiveness feels like protection. But it functions like a mirror—bouncing blame back instead of absorbing it. “It’s not my fault the report was late—Sarah didn’t send me the data!” Maybe true. But the moment you deflect, you shut down dialogue. You’re no longer solving a problem. You’re fighting for moral survival. And that’s exhausting. Partners (or colleagues) stop bringing up issues because they know it’ll turn into a courtroom scene where everyone pleads not guilty.
Stonewalling is different. It’s emotional withdrawal. The person shuts down. Eyes glaze. Answers become monosyllabic. Or worse—they just leave. Physically or mentally. This isn’t calm. It’s flooding. The nervous system overloaded. Studies show heart rates can spike to over 100 bpm during stonewalling episodes. It’s not indifference. It’s panic disguised as coldness. And yet, to the other person, it feels like abandonment. A relationship can’t survive on one side shouting into silence.
How Defensiveness Sabotages Trust
Because accountability is rare. Because we’re taught from childhood to avoid punishment, not repair harm. A manager deflects blame for a failed project. A sibling denies saying something hurtful. “I didn’t mean it that way” becomes a shield. But intention isn’t impact. And when impact is denied, the wounded party feels gaslit. Data is still lacking on how much cultural background shapes defensiveness—some environments punish admission of fault more severely—but anecdotally, hierarchical structures breed it. In families where shame is weaponized, or workplaces where mistakes cost jobs, defensiveness isn’t weakness. It’s survival. Which explains why breaking the habit requires systemic change, not just “try harder.”
Stonewalling: When Silence Screams
It’s a bit like emotional triage. The brain, overwhelmed, triggers a freeze response. You’ve seen it in animals playing dead. Humans do the same—just with emails unanswered and doors closed. Gottman found stonewalling usually begins after 6 minutes of escalating conflict. That’s not coincidence. It’s a biological limit. As a result: attempts to “talk it out” at that point are futile. You might as well yell at a coma patient. The person isn’t processing language. They’ve disengaged. And demanding they “talk to me!” only deepens the shutdown. The issue remains: how do you reconnect when one person is psychologically miles away?
Conflict vs. Toxicity: Not All Arguments Are Dangerous
This is where it gets tricky. Healthy conflict is necessary. Partners who never argue often have deeper problems: avoidance, apathy, or repression. The key isn’t absence of friction. It’s the presence of repair. Can you apologize? Can you listen without rebutting? Do you return to the conversation later, calm and open? Couples who manage this—even if they fight about money or chores—have stronger bonds. Because they’ve proven they can survive storms. Toxic behaviours prevent repair. Criticism shuts down receptivity. Contempt kills motivation to try. Defensiveness blocks accountability. Stonewalling ends the conversation entirely. Honestly, it is unclear why we keep conflating conflict with toxicity. They are opposites in disguise. One destroys. The other, if handled right, builds resilience.
Four Toxic Behaviours Compared: Impact and Indicators
Let’s map them side by side—not as equal demons, but as a hierarchy of harm. Criticism might be common, but contempt is the deadliest. One study found contemptuous couples had higher rates of illness—cold, flu, even cancer—over 10 years. Stress weakens immunity. Makes sense. Defensiveness and stonewalling? They’re the escape routes. One fights. One flees. But both avoid the real work: staying present.
To give a sense of scale, consider this: in mediation sessions, identifying these patterns reduces divorce rates by 40% when couples receive targeted coaching. That’s not a small number. And it’s not about eliminating conflict. It’s about naming the landmines. Once you see them, you can step around.
Which Is Hardest to Change?
Contempt. Without question. Because it’s not just behaviour. It’s belief. You can’t unlearn superiority overnight. It’s tied to self-worth. Often, the contemptuous person feels chronically disrespected themselves. Their sarcasm is a distorted call for validation. Which explains why “just stop being mean” fails. You have to rebuild the foundation. That said, stonewalling is the hardest to detect—because the person seems passive. But passivity can be violence, too.
And yes, I am convinced that culture shapes this. In individualistic societies, criticism and defensiveness dominate. In collectivist ones, stonewalling and passive contempt (like silent treatment) are more common. But the damage? Equally corrosive.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can these behaviours exist without someone realizing it? Absolutely. Most toxic behaviour is unconscious. A manager mocks an employee’s idea, thinking they’re “keeping standards high.” A parent dismisses their teen’s feelings as “drama.” The lack of awareness doesn’t excuse harm. But it does explain why feedback often backfires. Because the person hears, “You’re a monster,” not, “Here’s a pattern we can fix.”
Are toxic behaviours the same as abuse?
No. Abuse is systemic control—physical, emotional, financial. Toxic behaviours are patterns that damage connection but aren’t always intentional domination. But—and this matters—they can be precursors. A steady diet of contempt can escalate. Because small harms normalize larger ones.
Can you recover from these patterns?
You can. It takes work. Therapy helps. So does structured communication training. The window for repair is wider than most think. Gottman found couples could reverse decline even after 90% of interactions were negative—if they committed to new habits. Improvement isn’t linear. But it’s possible. Start with noticing. Then pause. Then, just for once, don’t react. Breathe. And ask: “What are you really saying?”
The Bottom Line
The four toxic behaviours—criticism, contempt, defensiveness, stonewalling—are not personality flaws. They’re learned responses to fear. And while they erode relationships, they’re also signposts. Pointing to where we’re hurting. Where we feel unsafe. Where we never learned to say, “I’m scared,” so we say, “You’re wrong,” instead. Breaking these cycles isn’t about perfection. It’s about awareness. It’s catching yourself mid-eye-roll. It’s choosing to stay in the room when every nerve screams to leave. We’re not doomed by these patterns. But we are responsible for them. And that’s not a burden. It’s hope. Because if we created these habits, we can uncreate them. One breath. One apology. One moment of real listening at a time. Suffice to say, that’s where healing begins.