If you've ended up here at midnight, quietly worried that your sex life is over — take a breath. You're not broken, your relationship isn't broken, and you're in extremely common company. Almost nobody talks about it out loud, which is exactly why it feels so isolating.
Why it happens (it's rarely about wanting you less)
It's tempting to read "no sex" as "she's not attracted to me anymore." Almost always, that's not the story. A lot is happening at once:
- Her body is recovering. Healing, hormones, and (if she's breastfeeding) lower estrogen can reduce desire and cause discomfort. This is physiology, not rejection.
- Exhaustion is real. Broken sleep flattens libido for anyone. You can't feel turned on when your body is just trying to survive the day.
- "Touched out." When someone is held, fed, and grabbed by a tiny human all day, being touched can feel like one more demand rather than a pleasure.
- Identity shift. Both of you are becoming parents. Figuring out how to feel like a partner and a lover again — not just a caregiver — takes time.
And your side matters too. Feeling rejected, invisible, or like "a roommate who does chores" is a real and valid experience. Naming it honestly — without blame — is the first step.
It's usually not really about sex
Here's the reframe that changes everything: for most couples, sex doesn't come back because they "scheduled it." It comes back as a result of feeling close, safe, and like a team again. Chasing the sex directly tends to add pressure, which kills desire faster than anything. Chase the closeness, and intimacy tends to follow.
So how long does it last?
Honestly: it depends, and anyone giving you a guaranteed number is guessing. What actually predicts how quickly things recover isn't time — it's connection. Couples who keep small moments of warmth alive during the dry spell tend to find their way back faster than couples who wait in silence and keep score.
What actually helps
- Lower the stakes. Take "sex" off the table as a goal for a while. Aim for closeness with zero expectation it leads anywhere.
- Non-demand affection. A long hug, holding hands, a hand on the back — touch that asks for nothing. This rebuilds safety.
- Tiny daily bids. A text, a specific compliment, bringing her a glass of water. Small moments of "I see you" compound.
- Talk about closeness, not frequency. "I miss feeling close to you" lands very differently from "we never have sex anymore."
- Take real load off her plate. For an exhausted partner, you carrying the mental load is often the most attractive thing you can do.
What doesn't help
Pressure, guilt-trips, keeping a tally, and the dreaded "we need to talk" ambush at 11 PM. None of it works, and all of it makes the gap wider.
When to reach out for more help
Sometimes this is more than the normal dip. Please talk to a doctor or a qualified professional if there's pain during sex, if low mood, anxiety, or hopelessness is lingering for either of you (postpartum depression affects fathers too), or if the distance has hardened into ongoing resentment or conflict. Asking for help early is a strength, not a failure.
This article is for information and support. It isn't medical or psychological advice and isn't a substitute for professional care. If you or your partner are experiencing abuse, or you're in crisis, please contact a qualified professional or a local support service.