The original poster (OP) describes a significant and prolonged lack of intimacy in his marriage, noting that for the last two to three years, their sex life has been very infrequent, with the most recent dry spell lasting over 15 months. The OP explains that his wife has been under considerable stress recently due to starting a new career and dealing with female health issues, which he has tried to support her through.
Despite the OP consistently expressing his love daily, attempts to initiate intimacy were frequently met with excuses like being too tired or distracted by her phone until falling asleep. After conditioning himself to expect no physical touch, the wife suddenly initiated sex after the long dry spell, but the OP refused, stating that intimacy cannot simply go from zero to a hundred after months of rejection. This refusal has led the OP to question whether he acted wrongly in this situation.

AITAH for declining sex with my wife








As renowned relationship therapist Dr. Stan Tatkin advises, “Healthy relationships require what I call the secure state—and that involves being able to have difficult conversations about needs and boundaries, even when it feels uncomfortable.”
This situation highlights a breakdown in relational maintenance, specifically concerning sexual needs and emotional availability. The wife’s prolonged withdrawal, likely influenced by stress and health issues, led the OP to build a psychological defense mechanism—conditioning himself not to expect physical connection. While the wife’s stress is a valid external factor, her consistent non-responsiveness created an implicit boundary that the OP respected by ceasing initiation. When she finally initiated after 15 months, the OP’s reaction was a direct response to the established pattern of unilateral control over intimacy. His refusal was not necessarily malicious, but a demonstration that intimacy requires mutual readiness and initiation, not just compliance when the previously dominant party decides the time is right.
The OP’s action of refusing was understandable given the history of being repeatedly shut down. However, shutting down the sudden attempt also reinforces the ‘zero or a hundred’ dynamic. A more constructive approach would be for both partners to engage in a direct conversation, perhaps immediately following the incident, to establish mutual expectations for intimacy moving forward, focusing on consistent communication rather than reactive performance. The issue is not the desire itself, but the lack of shared rhythm and respectful negotiation around physical needs.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.





















The core conflict centers on the OP’s emotional adjustment to consistent rejection versus the wife’s sudden, unilateral attempt to re-establish physical intimacy after a very long period of abstinence. The OP feels that his need for initiation and connection was ignored for months, making him unable to immediately reciprocate when the dynamic suddenly reversed.
The question for debate is whether the OP was justified in refusing sex due to the preceding pattern of rejection, or if he should have accepted the unexpected initiation from his wife regardless of the prior dynamic. How should a long-term imbalance in sexual initiation be addressed when one partner eventually tries to correct it?







