A topological space $(X,\mathcal T)$ is said to be divisible iff for each neighborhood $U$ of the diagonal $\Delta=\{(x,x)\mid x\in X\}$ in $X\times X$, there is a symmetric neighborhood $V$ of the diagonal such that: $$V\circ V\subseteq U$$
Is every $T_4$ topological space divisible?
Unfortunately not, but (the way I know how) to demonstrate this is not entirely simple
Definition: A T$_1$-space $X$ is called collectionwise normal if for every discrete family $\{ F_i : i \in I \}$ of closed subsets of $X$ there is a pairwise disjoint family $\{ W_i : i \in I \}$ of open subsets of $X$ such that $F_i \subseteq W_i$ for all $i \in I$.
(Perhaps for this reason divisible spaces are sometimes called strongly collectionwise normal.)
And there are normal spaces which are not collectionwise normal, for example Bing's $G$.
[Cohen's theorem is from his article Sur un problème de M. Dieudonné, C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris 234, (1952). 290–292.]