Why Couples Stop Having Sex (And What It Actually Means)
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概要
One of the most emotionally painful conflicts couples face is sexual disconnection, but the story most people tell themselves about that disconnection is often wrong.
One partner believes: “They’re not attracted to me anymore.” The other believes: “Something must be wrong with me because I can’t want sex the way they do.”
Both people feel rejected, both people feel pressure, and slowly, sex stops being a place of connection and starts becoming a scoreboard of hurt feelings.
In this episode of Intimacy Today, we unpack why loss of desire rarely means loss of love; and how most couples are actually caught in a stress cycle, not a compatibility issue – because the problem usually isn’t attraction but the environment in which attraction is trying to exist.
What We Explore:
- Why sexual disconnection feels deeply personal (even when it isn’t)
- The Pursuer–Withdrawer cycle and how it quietly escalates pressure
- Why emotional disconnection often shows up as sexual disconnection
- The difference between spontaneous desire and responsive desire
- How stress, resentment, and nervous system overload suppress attraction
- Why avoidance is often protective, not rejecting
- How couples accidentally argue about the symptom instead of the root
Reframing Sexual Disconnection:
Sexual conflict is rarely about sex. It’s about emotional safety, stress levels, unspoken resentment, and feeling valued vs feeling pressured.
When the relationship environment feels tense, the body doesn’t lean toward desire, it leans toward protection.
Practical Repair Conversations:
Instead of: “Why don’t you want me anymore?” try questions like…
- “What helps you feel relaxed and safe with me?”
- “Do you feel pressure when this comes up?”
- “What kind of closeness helps your desire come online?”
Curiosity creates connection, and pressure shuts it down.
If you’ve ever:
- Felt rejected when your partner’s desire changed
- Felt pressure to want sex you didn’t feel ready for
- Wondered if your relationship was broken because your sex life changed
This episode is for you.
Listen now and explore how to move from pressure and misinterpretation to understanding and reconnection.
Intimacy starts with you.
https://intimacyinprogress.com/
#IntimacyInProgress #DesireMismatch #RelationshipPsychology #AttachmentTheory #EmotionalIntimacy
Additional Resources:
The Gottman Institute – Desire in Longterm Relationships
Adult Attachment, Stress, and Romantic Relationships