
Whether you’re newly married or have been together for years, sex is a real part of marriage, not just physically, but emotionally too.
As a marriage therapist, I see so many couples who live more like roommates than partners.
They’re kind to each other. They take care of the kids. But when it comes to sex? There’s very little, sometimes none at all.
And that quiet distance?
It doesn’t stay quiet for long. It builds into resentment, emotional withdrawal, and for some, even infidelity.
In fact, studies show that over 60% of married people experience some level of sexual dissatisfaction.
And in India, search terms like:
Because wanting sex real, connected, meaningful sex is human.
And you don’t have to suffer in silence.
Sexual dissatisfaction in marriage isn’t just about how often you have sex.
It’s about how it feels when you do or don’t.
For some people, it’s about desire, one partner wants more, the other avoids it.
For others, it’s not about frequency at all. It’s about feeling disconnected, ignored, bored, or even emotionally unsafe during intimacy.
As a therapist, I often hear things like:
“We have sex… but it feels mechanical.”
“I don’t feel wanted anymore.”
“He touches me, but I just freeze inside.”
“We haven’t had sex in months… and we don’t talk about it either.”
Sound familiar?
At first, it starts with missed cues.
Later, it turns into missed months even years.
And here’s what often follows:
Sexual dissatisfaction seeps into everything else.
You may still care about your partner, but if your physical and emotional needs stay unmet, the relationship begins to feel like a shell.
💬 Want to understand the deeper emotional disconnect behind all this?
You might also relate to Signs Your Relationship Can’t Be Fixed, it’s not always about giving up, but about recognising when something needs to change.
You might be thinking:
“We don’t even fight that much… so why does it feel like we’re miles apart in bed?”
Here’s the truth sexual dissatisfaction doesn’t only happen in toxic marriages.
It happens in marriages where couples share a home, raise kids, manage bills and yet, go to bed feeling like strangers.
I’ve worked with countless couples who care about each other but haven’t had real intimacy in months, sometimes years. They’re not cruel to each other. But somewhere along the way, the connection faded.
Here are some of the most common (and painfully relatable) reasons:
When emotional closeness fades, physical intimacy usually disappears too.
If you’ve stopped talking, laughing, or feeling emotionally safe together, it shows up in the bedroom.
Sex becomes quiet, quick, or completely absent not because of hate, but because of distance.
One wants it more. The other avoids it.
Sometimes it’s about libido. Sometimes it’s about how or when you want intimacy.
And over time, what starts as “we’re just not in sync” becomes “we don’t try anymore.”
Work stress. Parenting. Housework. Elder care. Financial pressure.
For many couples, especially women desire takes a backseat when the brain is on overload 24/7.
Touch becomes one more thing to manage.
You may not even remember the last big fight. But that doesn’t mean the wounds aren’t there.
Resentment can grow quietly:
Touch begins to feel forced, or worse, unwanted.
It could be:
These issues are common, treatable, and valid, but most people suffer silently out of shame or fear.
In many marriages, especially in traditional families, sex is taught as a “duty” or something shameful.
This leads to years of silence, guilt, and unmet needs.
You might never have had a safe space to even talk about what you enjoy or desire.
💬 If you grew up feeling shame about your body or needs, this article on when your partner doesn’t understand your emotions might help you reflect on how early conditioning affects intimacy today.
Sexual dissatisfaction isn’t “just a bedroom issue.”
It slowly erodes the emotional core of your relationship, even if everything else on the outside seems fine.
You start by skipping touch.
Then come the silent dinners, cold shoulders, emotional shutdowns and suddenly, you’re more like roommates than a couple.
As a therapist, I’ve heard these words far too often:
“We don’t fight. We just exist.”
“I feel invisible in my own marriage.”
“I’m scared to even bring it up… it’s been too long.”
Here’s what that slow erosion can look like in real life:
When sex fades, so does emotional closeness.
You may still care about each other, but affection feels hollow.
You stop reaching for each other physically and emotionally.
One partner feels rejected.
The other feels pressured or emotionally drained.
No one feels fully seen.
And that gap? It becomes a cycle of blame, withdrawal, or pretending everything’s “fine.”
There’s a specific kind of pain that comes from lying next to someone who feels emotionally unavailable.
“We sleep in the same bed, but it feels like we’re on opposite sides of the world.”
That kind of isolation wears people down slowly, silently.
This doesn’t excuse betrayal but chronic sexual and emotional dissatisfaction can increase the chances of seeking connection elsewhere.
In fact, a 2022 study found that couples experiencing long-term sexual frustration were 3 times more likely to detach emotionally or physically.
In India, many couples don’t talk about this but they’re searching.
Terms like:
Globally, around 15–20% of marriages are considered sexless.
And many more drift into low-touch, low-affection partnerships that feel more functional than loving.
💬 If you’re wondering whether things are truly fixable, this article on signs your relationship can’t be fixed might help you reflect honestly no judgment.
You can talk about bills. You can talk about your child’s school.
You can even fight about in-laws.
But when it comes to sex? Silence.
As a therapist, I’ve seen couples go 10 years without a real conversation about intimacy.
Not because they don’t care but because they don’t know how to begin.
Here’s why sexual frustration in marriage often goes unspoken:
Many people think:
The fear of what could go wrong often outweighs the need to be honest.
Some people were taught that:
Others carry deep emotional scars from sexual trauma, rejection, or even early body shame that make any conversation feel exposing.
In many Indian households, sex is either a duty or a taboo.
And even between spouses, there’s often no open conversation about needs, pleasure, or discomfort.
What happens then?
💬 If you’re struggling to explain how you feel without being misunderstood, this guide on emotional disconnect in relationships can help you find the words.
The truth is: avoiding conversations about sex doesn’t protect the relationship it slowly breaks it down.
And when nobody’s talking, assumptions take over:
But you’re not asking for too much.
You’re asking for intimacy, safety, and honesty, and that’s how real connection begins.
In my work as a marriage therapist, I’ve seen it start in small, invisible ways.
One partner stops reaching for the other in bed.
There’s no more random hugs in the kitchen.
You avoid touch not because of anger, but because it feels awkward now.
You scroll in bed instead of talking.
You sleep with your back turned, not because you want to, but because you don’t know how to face each other anymore.
This is how sexual dissatisfaction in marriage often begins, not with fights, but with silence.
And when that silence stretches on, it becomes resentment.
Then disconnection.
And eventually, a sexless marriage that feels like emotional starvation.
But Here’s the Truth:
You’re not being dramatic for wanting to feel wanted.
You’re not asking for too much by needing more than just a “functioning marriage.”
You want to feel:
You don’t have to fix everything overnight.
But you do have to stop pretending it’s “normal” to feel invisible in your own relationship.
Whether it’s through small conversations, rebuilding physical intimacy, or seeking professional support, the change begins when you stop staying silent.
If you’re tired of:
Then it’s time to try something different.
At PsychiCare’s online sex therapy clinic, we’ve helped thousands of couples address:
And we do it with care, confidentiality, and real support.
Because this isn’t just about sex.
It’s about your emotional health, your self-worth, and the future of your relationship.
👉 Book your private online session now and start reclaiming connection, one honest step at a time.
Sexual dissatisfaction is the feeling that your sexual needs, emotional, physical, or both, aren’t being met in a relationship. It may involve a lack of desire, emotional disconnect, boring or mechanical sex, or feeling unwanted. It’s one of the most common reasons couples emotionally drift apart.
Yes, sexual desires are completely normal. They’re part of healthy human functioning and can reflect emotional connection, physical need, or personal curiosity. Suppressing sexual desires without understanding them can lead to frustration or emotional stress.
Yes, long-term sexual frustration can contribute to depression. When intimacy and physical connection are missing, it can trigger emotional loneliness, low self-esteem, and anxiety, especially in committed relationships or sexless marriages.
Start with honest, non-blaming communication. Rebuild emotional safety first, then gradually work on physical intimacy. Explore what’s missing: desire, emotional closeness, or pleasure and consider sex therapy if the issue persists.
Choose a calm moment and use “I” statements like, “I’ve been feeling disconnected during intimacy.” Make it about reconnection, not blame. Ask open questions, listen with care, and create emotional safety before focusing on solutions.
Yes. If one partner refuses sex without a valid reason or intimacy breaks down completely, courts may consider it emotional cruelty. Even without legal grounds, many people leave relationships due to unresolved sexual dissatisfaction.
Start gently: “Can we talk about how we’ve been feeling lately?” Use words that show care, not criticism. Express what you need more of, not what your partner is doing wrong. Keep the goal focused on emotional and physical connection.
Common causes include emotional disconnection, mismatched libidos, stress, fatigue, unresolved resentment, performance anxiety, medical conditions, or lack of open sexual communication. Cultural shame or trauma can also contribute silently.
Sexual dysfunction refers to persistent problems with sexual desire, arousal, orgasm, or pain during intercourse. It can be caused by medical issues, mental health conditions, relationship problems, or side effects of medications.
Female sexual dysfunction includes low desire, trouble with arousal or orgasm, and pain during sex. Causes may be hormonal, psychological, or emotional. It’s common, especially after childbirth, trauma, or stress, and it’s treatable.
People who feel emotionally connected, respected, and openly communicate their needs report the highest sexual satisfaction, regardless of frequency. Mutual trust and emotional safety are often more important than technique or routine.
You may feel sexually unsatisfied due to emotional distance, lack of variety or communication, unresolved hurt, mismatched libidos, or feeling unseen by your partner. Identifying the emotional root is key to resolving the disconnect.
Yes. When ignored, sexual frustration can lead to resentment, withdrawal, or infidelity. It affects emotional well-being and can slowly break down trust and affection in a relationship. Talking about it early is healthier than staying silent.
Chronic sexual repression can lead to emotional distress, relationship problems, and loss of self-esteem. Suppressing desire without understanding it may cause shame, guilt, or anxiety about intimacy and connection.
Sexual satisfaction is the experience of feeling emotionally and physically fulfilled in your intimate life. It involves pleasure, connection, trust, and mutual respect, not just orgasm or frequency.
Lying in bed exhausted but too stressed to sleep? Mind racing? Thinking about work, mistakes,…
You’ve tried to talk, but every conversation turns into a fight or worse, silence. You…
When people hear “brain injury,” they often think of physical problems: Headaches and dizziness Fatigue…
Trauma doesn’t always stay in the past. It can live on in the body, tight…
Updated: November 2025 · Added clearer breakdown of OCD subtypes and updated clinical language. Obsessive-Compulsive…
Dating in 2025 feels harder than ever. People disappear without a word, send mixed signals,…