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Stop Texting Your Ex: Why No Contact Actually Works

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
11 min read

It's 11:47 PM. You're in bed, phone in hand, fingers hovering over the keyboard. You've written and deleted the same message six times.

"I miss you." "Hope you're doing well." "Can we talk?" Your heart is racing, your hands are trembling, and a small voice whispers: "Just one message, it can't hurt."

If you recognize yourself, you're experiencing one of the most difficult battles of heartbreak: no contact. And if I told you that this irresistible urge to reach out to your ex isn't a sign of love but a symptom of neurological withdrawal, would it help you put the phone down?

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I'm Gildas Garrec, a CBT Psychotherapist in Nantes, and this article will explain what's really happening in your brain when you're in no contact — and most importantly, how to stick with it.

What is no contact?

No contact (or "radio silence") is a period during which you cut all contact with your ex-partner:

  • No messages (SMS, WhatsApp, DM)
  • No calls
  • No checking their social media
  • No contact through mutual friends
  • No "liking" or reacting to their posts
  • No "accidentally" passing by their place
No contact isn't a manipulation technique to "get your ex back" — even though that's unfortunately what many coaches sell online. It's a therapeutic tool whose primary purpose is to help you heal.

No contact vs partial no contact

In some situations, complete no contact is impossible:

  • You have children together
  • You work together
  • You share a lease or loan
In these cases, we talk about partial no contact or "minimal contact": exchanges are limited to the bare essentials (logistics, children) and remain factual, without emotional or affective dimensions. It's harder, but just as necessary.

Why no contact is so difficult: the neurology of attachment

Your brain is in withdrawal

This isn't a poetic metaphor. Research by neuroscientist Helen Fisher (2010, Rutgers University) showed through functional MRI that the brain of a recently separated person presents the same activations as someone in cocaine withdrawal. The affected areas:

  • The ventral tegmental area (VTA): the center of motivation and reward. When you were in a relationship, each interaction with your partner triggered a dopamine release. Now your brain is craving its fix.
  • The caudate nucleus: involved in habit learning. Your ex was a neurological habit. Every evening spent without them is a habit your brain must unlearn.
  • The prefrontal cortex: your rational décision-making center. In withdrawal, it's literally short-circuited by the limbic system (emotional).
That's why you intellectually know contacting your ex is a bad idea, but your entire body pushes you to do it. You're not weak. You're in withdrawal.

The intermittent reinforcement cycle

There's a psychological phenomenon that explains why you keep coming back: intermittent reinforcement. It's the same mechanism as slot machines.

When a reward is unpredictable (one day your ex responds kindly, the next they ignore you), your brain hooks even harder than if the response were consistent. This is why unstable or toxic relationships create even stronger addiction.

Each message sent is a pull on the slot machine lever. Sometimes you get a reward (dopamine jackpot), sometimes not (frustration that reinforces the urge to try again). The only way out of this cycle: stop playing.

Oxytocin: the attachment chemical trap

Oxytocin, often called the "attachment hormone," is massively released during intimate physical and emotional contact. After a breakup, your oxytocin levels plummet sharply, creating a genuine state of affective withdrawal.

This withdrawal manifests as:

– A sensation of physical emptiness in your chest

– A visceral need for proximity

– Phantom sensations (feeling the presence of the other person)

These sensations are biological. They pass with time — but only if you don't reactivate them by recontacting your ex.

7 CBT strategies to stick with no contact

1. The "Urge Surfing" technique

In CBT, we use a technique called urge surfing. The principle: the urge to contact your ex works like a wave. It rises, peaks, then falls — provided you don't act on it.

In practice:

– When the urge rises, put your phone down and set a timer for 20 minutes.

– Observe the urge without judgment: "I notice I want to send a message. It's an impulse, not an order."

– Note the intensity on a scale of 0 to 10 every 5 minutes. You'll see it naturally decreases.

Most people I work with find that the urge drops significantly after 15-20 minutes.

2. The consequences register

Take a sheet of paper and make two columns:

If I send the message
If I stick with no contact

Immediate relief (2 min)
Lasting pride in holding firm

Anxiety waiting for a response
No additional anxiety

Cold response = breakdown
Progress in grieving

Émotional relapse
Reinforced self-trust

Loss of perceived dignity
Maintenance of self-respect

Reread this chart each time the urge strikes. CBT research shows that making consequences visible helps short-circuit impulsive décisions.

Also worth reading: Take our free get your ex back test — free, anonymous, immediate results.

3. Environmental blocking

Don't rely on willpower alone. Modify your environment:

  • Delete your ex's number (or archive it somewhere hard to access)
  • Block or hide their profiles on social media — not out of hostility, but for emotional hygiene
  • Disable notifications from apps where you communicated
  • Ask a trusted friend to be your "SOS person": the one you call BEFORE contacting your ex

4. Planned behavioral activation

Inactivity is the enemy of no contact. The more empty time you have, the more your brain fills the void with obsessive thoughts.

Concrete action: Plan your week in advance. Each evening, note 3 activities for tomorrow, even simple ones:

– Monday: 30-min run + call mom + cook something new

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– Tuesday: work + yoga + watch a series episode with a friend

CBT research (Martell et al., 2010) confirms that behavioral activation is as effective as antidepressants in mild to moderate dépression cases.

5. Cognitive restructuring of "trap" thoughts

Your brain will send you thoughts that seem reasonable but are actually traps:

Trap thought
CBT response

"Just to see how they're doing"
"This isn't kindness, it's withdrawal."

"We could stay friends"
"Friendship might come later, but not during grieving."

"It's rude not to respond"
"Protecting myself isn't rudeness."

"One last message to close things"
"I've thought that 15 times. There's never a last message."

"Nobody understands me like they do"
"That's familiarity bias talking, not reality."

Write down your trap thoughts in a notebook and write the rational response next to it. This cognitive restructuring work is at the heart of CBT.

6. The unsent letter

This is a powerful therapeutic exercise. Write to your ex everything you want to tell them: anger, longing, love, betrayal, unanswered questions. Write without filter, without revision, without self-censorship.

Then don't send it. Put it away. Reread it in a month. You'll be surprised how much your emotions have shifted.

This exercise externalizes emotional weight without fueling the contact cycle.

7. Anchoring in your values

Third-wave CBT (ACT) teaches us to ask ourselves a fundamental question: "What really matters to me?"

Is sending this message aligned with your values of self-respect, dignity, and personal growth? Or is it a fear-and-withdrawal reaction?

Write down 5 values that matter to you (examples: autonomy, honesty, courage, growth, compassion). When the urge to recontact your ex arises, reread them and ask yourself: "What action would be aligned with my values right now?"

How long should you maintain no contact?

The question that loops endlessly. Here are the benchmarks I give in consultation:

Recommended minimum

  • 30 days: this is the absolute minimum for your brain to start unlearning habits related to your ex.
  • 60 to 90 days: this is the duration I recommend for relationships lasting over a year. Neuroscience shows it takes about 66 days for a new behavior to become automatic (Lally et al., 2010, European Journal of Social Psychology).

Signs you're ready to break the silence

  • You can think about your ex without strong emotional surges
  • You no longer need to know what they're doing
  • Your motivation for recontacting them is no longer withdrawal but genuine, detached interest
  • You're able to accept that contact might lead nowhere
  • You've rebuilt a life you enjoy independently of this relationship
If you're unsure, you're probably not ready yet.

When and how to break the silence

If you decide to reestablish contact after no contact, here are the rules:

  • Be clear about your intention: is it for you or for them?
  • Choose the right channel: a written message rather than a call, to maintain control of your emotions.
  • Keep it light: no declarations, no summaries. A simple "Hope you're doing well" is enough.
  • Accept silence: if your ex doesn't respond, it's not a failure of no contact. It's information.
  • Don't confuse contact with reconciliation: reestablishing contact doesn't mean resuming the relationship.
  • The mistakes that cause relapse

    Mistake 1: "Partial no contact"

    "I'm not messaging them anymore, but I check their stories every day." That's not no contact. That's digital stalking disguised as discipline. Each check of their profile restarts the neurological loop.

    Mistake 2: "Innocent" contact

    Sending an article, a song, a même "that made me think of you." It's not innocent. It's an excuse to check if the connection still exists.

    Mistake 3: Contact through a friend

    "Can you ask X how they're doing?" Even if it's not direct contact, it maintains the obsession and can create awkward situations for everyone.

    Mistake 4: Alcohol and your phone

    A classic. Inhibitions drop, urges rise, and at 3 AM you send a message you'll regret in the morning. Solution: give your phone to a friend when you're going out, or delete your ex's contact when you know you'll be drinking.

    Mistake 5: Slipping once and abandoning everything

    You cracked and sent a message? It's not the end of the world and it's not back to square one. In CBT, we distinguish between lapses (slips) and relapses (full return). A lapse is human. What matters is resuming no contact immediately, without excessive guilt.

    No contact as an act of love toward yourself

    No contact is often seen as a punishment — a painful deprivation you inflict on yourself. But in reality, it's one of the most beautiful acts of love you can offer yourself.

    It's saying: "My healing comes before my immediate need for relief." It's choosing the temporary pain of withdrawal over the chronic pain of dependency. It's respecting yourself enough not to beg for attention from someone who chose to leave.

    If you feel you can't do it alone, that's not failure. It's a signal that you need structured support.

    The Love Coach Program (490 euros, 8 sessions) is designed exactly for this: to support you through the most difficult phases of heartbreak, with concrete CBT tools, personalized follow-up, and the certainty that someone understands you without judgment.

    You can also start with a first session (70 euros) to assess your situation.

    No contact is a marathon, not a sprint. And like any marathon, it requires preparation, it's run with support, and it's finished on your feet.


    Key takeaways:
    >
    No contact is not a manipulation technique to get your ex back. It's a therapeutic tool for healing. The irresistible urge to recontact your ex is a symptom of neurological withdrawal: the same brain circuits as addiction are at play. The recommended duration is 60 to 90 days minimum for a significant relationship. The 7 CBT strategies (urge surfing, consequences register, environmental blocking, behavioral activation, cognitive restructuring, unsent letter, values anchoring) give you concrete tools to stick with it. A lapse is not a relapse: if you slip, resume no contact without guilt. If you can't stick with it alone, that's a sign you need support, not that you're weak.

    Also worth reading

    Do you recognize yourself in this article?

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    Watch: Go Further

    To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:

    Why We Pick Difficult Partners - The School of LifeWhy We Pick Difficult Partners - The School of LifeThe School of Life

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