You reached for her, or hinted, and got a soft "not tonight" — again. And now there’s a quiet voice asking whether she’s still attracted to you at all. First, breathe: this is one of the most common things that happens after a baby, and it almost never means what you fear it means.
It’s almost never about you
When desire drops after a baby, men tend to read it as personal rejection. It rarely is. Her body is recovering, hormones have shifted (and if she’s breastfeeding, lower estrogen can reduce desire and cause discomfort), and broken sleep flattens libido for anyone. Add being "touched out" from a baby on her all day, and desire simply has no room left — it’s physiology and capacity, not a verdict on you.
What "not now" usually means
For most new mothers, "I don’t want sex" is closer to "I have nothing left in the tank" than "I don’t want you." Desire needs a baseline of safety, rest, and feeling like a person again — not just a parent. Until that baseline returns, pushing for sex tends to lower it further, because pressure is the opposite of safety.
What actually helps
Take "sex" off the table as a goal for a while and aim for closeness with zero expectation it leads anywhere. Offer non-demand affection (a long hug, a hand on the back). Take real load off her plate — carrying the mental load is often the most attractive thing you can do right now. And talk about closeness, not frequency: "I miss feeling close to you" lands very differently from "we never have sex."
What to avoid
Pressure, guilt-trips, keeping score of how long it’s been, and the dreaded "we need to talk" at 11 PM. All of it reads as more demand on an already-depleted partner, and all of it makes the gap wider.
When to get more help
If there’s pain during sex, if low mood or anxiety is lingering for either of you (postpartum depression affects fathers too), or if the distance has hardened into ongoing resentment, talk to a doctor or a qualified couples therapist. Reaching out early is a strength.
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.