Marcus works in software project management. Dana is a part-time pediatric nurse. By every external measure — finances, parenting, household logistics — their partnership functioned. But their sexual connection had flatlined completely.
Marcus first reached out after a conversation with a friend who mentioned his own couples therapy experience. "I realized I couldn't remember the last time we'd had sex," Marcus told us. "Not approximately. I literally could not remember. That scared me."
Dana, when interviewed separately, described the same period differently: "It wasn't that I didn't love him. I did. But my body had gone offline. After our second was born, it was like a switch flipped. I felt touched-out by 7 p.m. every night. The idea of more physical contact — even good contact — felt like another demand."
Their dry spell didn't start with a fight or a betrayal. It started with exhaustion, then avoidance, then a mutual unspoken agreement that sex was off the table — an agreement neither consciously made.
Marcus described a pattern that sex researcher Emily Nagoski calls "the wall of silence": "I'd think about initiating, then talk myself out of it. She's tired. The kids just went down. It's not the right time. After a while, I stopped thinking about it at all. Or told myself I did."
This is the paradox of desire discrepancy in long-term relationships: his silence felt like respect to her, but over time it registered as withdrawal. Her relief at not being pursued gradually transformed into a fear that the connection was gone. Eleven months passed. Neither named the problem.
Marcus and Dana followed a structured week-by-week protocol developed from principles in Nagoski's dual control model, Gottman's intimacy research, and sensate focus therapy. The protocol prioritizes removing sexual pressure before reintroducing physical connection.
Structured conversation using a "desire audit" framework. Both partners named what they missed, what they feared, and what they needed. No sex. No initiating. Agreement: physical touch without expectation.
Daily 15-minute "touch sessions" based on sensate focus Level 1 — holding, stroking, massage with explicit boundaries. Goal: rebuild physical safety. Research shows non-sexual touch increases oxytocin by 47% within two weeks (Holt-Lunstad, 2021).
Identifying each partner's "accelerators" and "brakes" using Nagoski's dual control model. For Dana, brakes included household mental load and feeling observed. They redistributed evening tasks and created a "no screens in bed after 10" rule.
Reintroducing sexual intimacy with explicit communication scripts. "What do you want tonight?" replaced assumption. Focus shifted from intercourse to mutual pleasure. Post-sex check-ins (10 minutes) became standard.
By Week 6, Dana initiated for the first time in over a year. "It wasn't because I suddenly had more energy," she reported. "It was because the pressure was gone. When Marcus stopped expecting sex and started just... being with me, my body remembered what it felt like to want."
Marcus described a parallel shift: "I learned that my job wasn't to 'get her in the mood.' My job was to remove everything that was putting her out of it. That reframe changed everything."
The critical insight: removing brakes worked better than pressing accelerators. According to Nagoski's research, most couples try to increase desire by adding novelty (the accelerator). But for couples in a dry spell, the brakes — stress, obligation, body image concerns, fear of rejection — are far more powerful. Address those first, and desire often returns on its own.
Three months after completing the protocol, Marcus and Dana reported sustained weekly intimacy and a communication pattern that had permanently shifted. "We talk about sex now like we talk about the budget," Marcus said. "It's just part of our life. Not a crisis."
"I thought the problem was that she didn't want me. The problem was that I didn't understand what 'wanting' actually looked like for her. Once I did, everything shifted."— Marcus, 38, Portland OR
Unspoken dry spells calcify. The single most important step is one honest conversation — even an awkward one. Research shows couples who name the problem are 3× more likely to resolve it (Gottman Institute, 2023).
Non-sexual physical contact — holding, massage, cuddling — rebuilds the somatic safety that must precede sexual desire. It's not foreplay. It's foundation.
Novelty, toys, and "spicing things up" fail when the underlying brakes (stress, obligation, fear) are still engaged. Identify what's turning her off before trying to turn her on.
Post-sex check-ins ("What was good? What could be different?") and weekly "desire conversations" normalize talking about sex. Awkwardness fades with repetition.
Dry spells that lasted months don't resolve in a weekend. The graduated approach — conversation, touch, arousal context, reconnection — requires patience. Rushing resets progress.