He carried the weight of unspoken desires and unmet needs, trapped in a silent struggle where love and longing collided. Four years of a dead bedroom had left him feeling isolated in a marriage that once promised passionate connection, now reduced to quiet compromises and aching distance.
But when his wife asked him to seek therapy—not for their relationship, but for himself—he faced a shattering truth: he had been unknowingly placing the burden of his happiness on her shoulders. In that moment, the fragile walls of blame began to crumble, revealing a deeper need to understand love beyond expectation and to heal from within.

So I told my wife that our marriage isn’t the right fit for me anymore when she took sex off the table. AITAH?









As renowned psychotherapist and author Esther Perel states, ‘The quality of our relationships determines the quality of our lives.’ In this case, the husband is reacting to a fundamental shift in the relationship’s quality where his primary language of love has been categorized as a chore or a responsibility. When the wife asked him to stop making her responsible for his needs, she likely intended for him to suppress them within the marriage. However, the husband took her words literally, exercising his autonomy by deciding that if she is not responsible for meeting those needs, he must find a situation where they can be met elsewhere.
This dynamic illustrates a common breakdown in high-desire and low-desire relationships. The wife’s defensive reaction to his decision to leave suggests a ‘pursuer-distancer’ loop. For years, the husband pursued, and the wife distanced. Once the husband stopped pursuing and chose to leave instead, the wife lost the power to set the terms of the intimacy, leading to her feeling ‘blindsided.’ His refusal to argue or remain angry shows a shift from emotional dependence to radical acceptance of their incompatibility.
The husband’s decision to end the marriage is a valid response to a permanent change in the marital contract. While his wife has every right to set boundaries regarding her body, the husband has an equal right to seek a partnership that aligns with his values. My recommendation is for both parties to transition their focus to a structured co-parenting plan. The husband should continue individual therapy to process the grief of the family structure changing while ensuring he remains an active and supportive father during the separation process.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.











You’ve done quite the job of rationalizing this but everything you’ve written is wildly selfish and clearly communicates the fact that when it comes to sex the only thing that matters to you is that you get what you want when you want it.




The husband finds himself in a position where his fundamental need for physical intimacy is viewed as an unfair burden by his spouse. He is caught in a conflict between his desire to feel loved through physical connection and the expectation that he should remain in a marriage where those needs are permanently dismissed.
Is it a healthy act of self-preservation to leave a marriage when a partner unilaterally removes intimacy from the relationship? Or is it a failure of marital commitment to prioritize personal sexual fulfillment over the stability of the family unit?







