Investigating why we get defensive is one of the tasks I help partners explore when relationships start to struggle.
The moment defensiveness enters a conversation, things can unravel fast. One person tries to explain themselves. The other pushes back. Someone goes quiet. Someone else tries to steer the whole thing in a different direction. And suddenly, the conversation isn’t really about understanding each other anymore, it’s about protecting ourselves.
I want you to know something important before we go any further: defensiveness doesn’t mean something is wrong with you.
Defensiveness is protection. Your nervous system is doing exactly what it was designed to do, guard something that feels vulnerable. Your dignity. Your autonomy. Your sense of belonging. Your need to feel understood.
The Many Forms of Defensiveness
Most people assume defensiveness looks like arguing. But in my experience, it’s so much more varied than that.
Sometimes it is arguing or pushing back.
But sometimes it looks like over-explaining yourself.
Sometimes it’s going completely silent.
Sometimes it’s quietly trying to control where the conversation goes so it doesn’t end up somewhere that feels unsafe.
All of these are defensive (read: self-protective) responses.
And most of the time, they’re not even a conscious choice. Our nervous systems pick up on potential threats and move to protect us before we’ve had a chance to consciously think about things.
What’s Actually Being Protected
It may help to remember this: when we slow down and get curious about our defensiveness, it almost always points to something tender underneath, to something that matters deeply to us.
Fear of being misunderstood.
Fear of losing control over your own choices.
Fear of being judged or shamed.
Fear of letting someone down.
Fear of conflict, or of losing connection with someone you love.
Our defenses aren’t arbitrary.
They developed for real reasons, in real moments, when we needed them. They were trying to help us get through something hard.
That’s why I always come back to compassion as our starting point and not frustration. The key is being genuinely curious about what our defenses have been quietly carrying.
Becoming More Skillful
That said, compassion for our defenses doesn’t mean we’re stuck with the patterns they create. Defensive reactions have a way of closing down the curiosity and connection we’re hoping for.
The good news is that we can learn to work with them differently.
When you freeze in response to something someone says, you might try asking a question, not to deflect, but to provide a moment to reconnect with what is actually wanted or needed.
When we feel the defensiveness rising in a conversation with a partner, we might try something simple and honest: “Here’s what happened inside of me.”
That one small shift (moving from trying to manage the other person’s reaction to simply sharing your own experience) can change the entire tone of a conversation.
I’ve seen it happen over and over again.
Coaching vs. Therapy
In the podcast episode that goes along with this post, I work live with two callers who are navigating moments where defensiveness has shown up in their lives. These conversations are a form of relational consulting; we explore small, practical shifts that can help someone respond more consciously in everyday interactions.
Sometimes that’s exactly what someone needs: a new skill, a different angle, a concrete thing to try.
But sometimes defensiveness is rooted in something deeper.
When that’s the case, therapeutic work can go to places that coaching can’t. Questions like:
Where did this pattern begin?
What does your nervous system believe will happen if you respond differently?
What emotions or memories get activated in moments like these?
Both kinds of work matter.
Sometimes we need practical skills.
Sometimes we need deeper healing.
And honestly, most of the time, we need a little of both.
A Question to Stay With
The next time you feel defensiveness rise in a conversation, I’d invite you to pause, even for just a breath, and ask yourself:
What is my nervous system trying to protect me from right now?
That question alone can open the door to a very different kind of conversation.
Listen to the full episode here: Why We Get Defensive, and What to Do Instead



