A husband was sick for seven days, during which time he skipped favorite activities like playing basketball and declined sexual intimacy when his wife initiated. The wife was understanding of his condition, noting he was functioning like a zombie and barely sleeping.
The wife felt that since the husband had refrained from intimacy for so long due to illness, she needed a clear signal that he was ready for sex afterward. When he did not clearly communicate his desire later in the week, and subsequent busy nights and the start of her period intervened, the situation escalated when he became angry about the lack of sex, leaving the wife questioning how to proceed.

AITAH – My husband was really sick and got mad at me about sex.

















As relationship expert and therapist Esther Perel states, “Desire is a delicate creature. It needs space to breathe, and it needs to be courted.” This situation highlights a breakdown in the ‘courting’ process, which, in this context, involves clear, mutual communication about desire and readiness.
The husband’s reaction suggests a conflation of sexual desire with personal validation. By interpreting his wife’s need for clarity as a personal rejection or a statement that she does not ‘want him,’ he escalates the situation into an emotional ultimatum (“I never want to have sex with you again”). His insistence that she should have known his desire without him asking, coupled with calling her ‘stupid,’ demonstrates a significant failure in respectful communication and emotional regulation. He appears to be placing the entire burden of reading his mind on his wife, while simultaneously punishing her for failing to do so, which aligns with common patterns of passive-aggressive communication.
The wife’s approach—waiting for a ‘green light’ after an illness—is a reasonable boundary rooted in ensuring mutual consent and comfort. However, she also allowed external factors (busy schedules, his stated preference against sex on basketball nights, and the onset of her period) to dictate the timeline, rather than directly addressing the unmet need. Moving forward, both partners need to practice direct communication regarding intimacy. The husband must learn that ‘wanting’ sex includes the responsibility to verbally invite it, especially after an absence, and the wife should feel empowered to directly ask about his desire rather than waiting for him to initiate an ambiguous hint.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.










The core conflict revolves around the difference in how the husband and wife process and communicate sexual needs, particularly following a period of illness. The husband expected his wife to interpret subtle cues or assume his readiness after his recovery, becoming angry when she prioritized clear communication over guessing his unspoken desires.
Does the responsibility for initiating intimacy after a significant pause lie primarily with the person who desires it to be explicitly stated, or is it reasonable to expect a partner to recognize non-verbal cues when the other partner has been silent about their needs? Where should the line be drawn between needing clarity and understanding implied desire?







