Free Resource · Couples · Sexual Wellbeing

Desire DiscrepancyWhen You Don't Want It at the Same Time

The most common sexual issue in long-term relationships — and one of the most misunderstood. This guide covers what's actually happening, why it isn't what you think, and exactly what to do about it.

Written by an HPCSA Registered Counsellor · Grounded in Dr. Emily Nagoski's dual control model and desire discrepancy research (Willoughby, Carroll, Basson, Levine)

8
Practical Strategies
2
Desire Systems Explained
5
Researchers Cited

Download Your Free 7-Week Challenge

If one of you wants sex more than the other, you're not unusual — desire discrepancy is present in the majority of long-term relationships at any given time. It isn't a sign that something is broken. It's a sign that you're two different people with different desire systems, living in close proximity to each other. This guide explains what's actually happening and gives you specific, practical ways to work with it — together.

Inside the Guide

Eight Parts, One Honest Conversation

Part 1

The Honest Picture

What desire discrepancy actually is — and the five ways it commonly gets misread by both partners.

Part 2

The Reframe That Changes Everything

Spontaneous vs. responsive desire — why "not in the mood" and "not interested" aren't the same thing.

Part 3

The Accelerator and the Brake

Nagoski's dual control model, and why releasing the brake works better than pressing harder.

Part 4

For the Higher-Desire Partner

What this experience actually feels like — and the pressure paradox that quietly makes it worse.

Part 5

For the Lower-Desire Partner

Guilt, obligation, and why saying yes for the wrong reasons backfires over time.

Part 6

Eight Things to Try This Week

Specific, actionable practices — from the brake audit to scheduled intimacy done properly.

Part 7

The Conversation, Out Loud

Exact language for both partners to open this up without blame or defensiveness.

Part 8

The Limits of Self-Help

Clear signs it's time for professional support — and what kind to look for.

The Evidence Behind It

Why This Actually Works

Every practice in this guide is drawn from established sex research — not generic relationship advice.

Dr. Emily Nagoski

Nagoski's dual control model, detailed in Come As You Are (2015), identifies an excitation system and an inhibition system governing desire in every person. Her research finds that reducing what's on the brake is consistently more effective than adding stimulation to the accelerator — the basis for most of this guide's practices.

Masters & Johnson

Sensate focus research — later confirmed by subsequent studies — shows that removing the performance endpoint from physical touch reliably increases desire and satisfaction in lower-desire partners, by separating physical intimacy from the pressure of an expected outcome.

Willoughby & Carroll

Their research on desire discrepancy in couples documents the higher-desire partner's experience — chronic rejection, reduced self-confidence, loneliness — as a legitimate and measurable pattern, not simply a personal sensitivity to be managed alone.

Is This For You?

Who This Guide Is — and Isn't — For

This is for you if:

  • You and your partner want sex at different frequencies and it's created tension, guilt, or distance
  • You want to understand what's actually driving the gap, not just manage around it
  • You're both willing to have an honest, non-blaming conversation about it
  • You want specific, practical practices to try together — not just theory

This isn't the right starting point if:

  • Sex is currently associated with physical pain — this needs a medical assessment first
  • One partner experiences no desire in any context, including alone — a GP visit is the right first step
  • The discrepancy is tied to past sexual trauma — individual, trauma-informed support should come first
  • Every conversation about this topic escalates into conflict before you can even begin
About the Author

Written By Sumarie Engelbrecht

Sumarie Engelbrecht, Founder of Wholistic Mental Health Care

Sumarie Engelbrecht

Founder & Owner, Wholistic Mental Health Care · HPCSA PRC 0042480

Sumarie specialises in premarital and couples counselling, helping partners work through exactly the kind of practical, sensitive territory this guide covers — with a warm, research-grounded approach that avoids blame and generic advice.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal for one partner to want sex more than the other?

Yes — research suggests desire discrepancy is present in the majority of long-term relationships at any given time. It reflects two different desire systems living in close proximity, not a compatibility problem or a defect in either partner.

What's the difference between spontaneous and responsive desire?

Spontaneous desire arrives unprompted, before any sexual context — the "standard model" most people assume is universal. Responsive desire emerges during rather than before stimulation, and requires the right conditions: safety, relaxation, low stress. Both are completely normal.

Why do I feel guilty for not wanting sex as much as my partner?

This guilt is common and understandable, but it's rarely accurate. Reduced desire is almost never primarily about attraction — it's usually about context: stress, exhaustion, body image, or a desire system that simply needs different conditions to activate.

Can scheduling sex actually help with mismatched libido?

For responsive-desire partners, yes — anticipation itself functions as an accelerator. Done properly, with the lead-up protected and the outcome kept flexible, scheduled intimacy consistently outperforms waiting for spontaneous desire that may not arrive on its own.

When should a couple see a sex therapist about desire discrepancy?

When sex is linked to pain, when one partner experiences no desire in any context, when the pattern is tied to past trauma, or when the topic can't be raised without escalating into conflict. A sex therapist or couples counsellor can provide structure a couple often can't build alone.

Ready for Deeper Support?

Some Conversations Go Further With GuidanceThe Wholistic Couples Counselling Retreat

A few days away, fully held, to work through exactly this kind of practical, personal territory — with structured support, no distractions, and time genuinely set aside for each other. Limited to a small number of couples per retreat.

Learn About the Retreat →

Download Your Free 7-Week Challenge