Many couples come to therapy saying the same thing:
“We love each other… but the desire has gone.”
When sexual desire changes or fades in a long-term relationship, it can feel confusing, painful, and deeply personal. People often worry that something is “wrong” with them, their partner, or the relationship itself.
In reality, changes in desire are extremely common — and rarely about lack of love or attraction.
Desire is not constant
One of the biggest myths about relationships is that desire should remain the same over time.
In the early stages of a relationship, novelty, excitement, and uncertainty often fuel strong sexual energy. As relationships become safer and more familiar, desire naturally shifts. This doesn’t mean intimacy is lost — it means it changes.
Long-term relationships ask desire to coexist with routine, responsibility, emotional history, and real life.
Common reasons desire fades
1. Emotional disconnection
Desire often depends on emotional closeness. When communication becomes strained, resentment builds, or conflicts remain unresolved, the body may respond by withdrawing sexually — even when love is still present.
2. Stress and mental load
Work pressure, parenting, financial worries, health concerns, and emotional exhaustion all affect desire. When the nervous system is in survival mode, sexual interest often takes a back seat.
Desire requires space, safety, and energy — not pressure.
3. Performance anxiety and expectation
Over time, sex can begin to feel predictable or pressured. Thoughts such as “we should be having sex more” or “something is wrong with us” can turn intimacy into a task rather than a shared experience.
Pressure often blocks desire rather than creating it.
4. Attachment patterns
For some people, closeness increases desire; for others, too much closeness can feel overwhelming. Differences in attachment styles — such as anxious and avoidant patterns — can affect how intimacy is experienced within long-term relationships.
This often leads to cycles of pursuit and withdrawal.
5. Changes in the body and hormones
Hormonal changes, medication, health conditions, ageing, and life transitions can all influence libido. These are physiological experiences — not personal failures — yet many people carry unnecessary shame around them.
Desire is responsive, not spontaneous
Many people expect desire to appear “out of nowhere.”
In long-term relationships, desire is often responsive, meaning it develops after connection, touch, safety, and emotional presence — not before.
Waiting to feel desire before intimacy can sometimes keep couples stuck.
What helps restore desire
Desire rarely returns through pressure or forcing change. Instead, it grows through:
- emotional safety
- curiosity rather than blame
- open communication
- slowing down intimacy
- shifting focus from performance to connection
- understanding each partner’s experience
Psychosexual therapy offers a space to explore these dynamics safely, verbally, and respectfully — without physical touch — helping couples and individuals understand what may be blocking desire and how intimacy can be rebuilt in a way that feels authentic.
Desire changing does not mean the relationship has failed
Loss of desire does not mean you have chosen the wrong partner or that intimacy is over.
Often, it is an invitation to understand yourselves — and each other — more deeply.
With support, many couples discover new ways of connecting that feel more honest, meaningful, and emotionally fulfilling than before.
If you are experiencing changes in desire within your relationship, you are not alone — and support is available.
Sometimes, desire doesn’t disappear.
It simply needs understanding, safety, and space to return.
Mirlene Santos Therapy — Integrative Counselling | Specialising in Psychosexual Therapy
Registered Member MBACP









