This article contains adult themes and is intended for readers 18+. Reader discretion is advised.
There’s a quiet kind of grief in a marriage where sex has disappeared. It’s not just about missing physical touch. It’s about missing the connection, the closeness, the unspoken language that once pulled two people together.
For many couples, this shift doesn’t happen overnight. It starts with exhaustion. Then resentment. Then silence. Eventually, the bedroom becomes a place to sleep, not a place to connect or feel.
When sex fades, other things usually fade first. The quick kisses. The hand holding. The passing compliments. These small signals of affection start to disappear and suddenly the idea of intimacy feels awkward, even forced.
One may feel rejected, the other overwhelmed. One may want closeness but not know how to ask. The other may feel the pressure to perform out of obligation.
If you’re not connecting during the day, it’s unlikely you’ll suddenly crave connection at night. Whatever the reason, ignoring it doesn’t make it disappear. It just makes it harder to come back.
Intimacy Doesn’t Start in the Bedroom
The first step isn’t to schedule sex, it’s to restore safety. You need to start small. Sit next to each other without devices. Say one kind thing a day, or even send a flirty text (you know the kind you probably sent when dating eachother!)
Tell your partner what you love about them. Tell them what you need. And ask what they need too.
The goal isn’t to force anything. It’s to rebuild the bridge between you, one step at a time.
A dry spell doesn’t mean your marriage is broken. It means something needs tending. Maybe your intimacy got buried under responsibility. Maybe you lost each other in the busyness of becoming parents, partners, providers.
But love, real love can weather seasons. And if you’re both still here, then you can find your way back.
Here are five intentional things a couple can do to rekindle intimacy emotionally and physically:
1. Reintroduce Non Sexual Touch
Start with touch that doesn’t lead to sex. A hand on the back while cooking. Holding hands while watching a show. A long hug at the end of the day. These small gestures build safety, trust, and emotional closeness, which reignites desire over time.
2. Schedule One “No-Phone” Night a Week
Create space to be present with each other. Light a candle, cook dinner together, take a walk, or play a game. Without screens or distractions, you create an environment for connection, laughter, and natural affection to return.
3. Talk About What You Miss…Not What’s Wrong
Instead of pointing out the lack try to share what you long for. Say, “I miss how playful we used to be” or “I miss how close I felt when we just talked in bed.” This opens the door without blame and invites your partner into a shared memory.
4. Flirt Again
Leave a note in their bag. Text them during the day with a compliment. Compliment how they look when they’re not expecting it. Flirting brings back lightness and it reminds you both that attraction doesn’t have to be complicated.
5. Plan a Surprise Date With a Twist
Take turns planning a mystery date night where the other has no idea what’s coming. It could be a themed dinner at home, a silly outfit challenge in public, or a blindfolded taste test night. The playful energy brings back curiosity, laughter, and flirtation without the pressure.
So if the spark has dimmed, don’t panic just get playful. Love doesn’t disappear, it just asks to be touched differently. Laugh more. Flirt like you’re still dating. Hold eye contact like it’s a secret. And most of all, remember this, intimacy isn’t about being perfect lovers, it’s about being present ones.
Let the slow burn begin.











