If you've been asking why your wife has lost interest in sex, or wondering how to feel attracted to your husband again after years together, you're not broken — and neither is your marriage. This guide covers the actual research on why desire fades in long-term relationships, and the specific, evidence-based practices that bring it back.
Written by an HPCSA Registered Counsellor · Grounded in research by Emily Nagoski, Esther Perel, Lori Brotto, and colleagues on desire in long-term relationships
This is not a list of tricks. It's the actual research on what keeps sexual desire and intimacy alive in long-term relationships — and the specific, evidence-based practices that help couples build something more satisfying than early-relationship spark, on purpose.
Why desire changes in long-term relationships — and why that's biology, not a failing marriage.
Jaiya's five-type framework for how each of you is actually wired for pleasure.
The single most honest conversation most couples have never had — with the exact questions to ask.
Why novelty reignites desire, and the specific shared experiences research links to it.
The most underused tool in long-term desire — and four practices to build it deliberately.
Lori Brotto's research on being genuinely present in the body — instead of mentally elsewhere.
What happens when you remove the goal entirely — Diana Richardson's research on non-goal-oriented intimacy.
Why staying genuinely interesting to each other is the deepest, most durable driver of desire.
Familiarity and erotic charge sit in real tension — the closeness and predictability that create security can work against desire, which is why distance and mystery matter as much as intimacy.
Randomised controlled trials found mindfulness-based sexual practices significantly increase desire, arousal, and satisfaction, with findings extending from women to men and long-term couples specifically.
Couples who do novel, mildly challenging things together report significantly higher relationship satisfaction and sexual desire than those whose shared life has become entirely routine.
Sumarie specialises in premarital and couples counselling, helping long-term partners rebuild genuine intimacy — grounded in research, not quick fixes.
It's rarely about attraction disappearing — it's usually habituation (a neurological, not relational, response to constant familiarity), sex being deprioritised behind work and exhaustion, or a sexual script that's become too predictable for the nervous system to respond to. Part 1 covers why this happens and what actually helps.
Research points to reintroducing novelty (Part 4), building anticipation deliberately rather than leaving intimacy to chance (Part 5), and continuing to genuinely discover each other as separate, still-surprising people rather than assuming you already know everything (Part 8).
Start with an honest, non-blaming conversation about what each of you actually finds erotic — the desire map in Part 3 — paired with deliberately building novelty and anticipation back into shared life. This guide's approach is research-backed rather than a checklist of tricks.
Reduced frequency is often about sex falling down the priority list behind logistics and exhaustion, not reduced desire in the abstract. Changing the context of intimacy and rebuilding anticipation across the day, covered in Parts 4 and 5, directly address this.
Understanding that habituation and fading passion are biological rather than a sign your marriage is failing is the first step — it removes the shame that often blocks couples from having the conversations that actually help. Part 1 and Part 3 are the place to start.
The erotic blueprints framework in Part 2 helps you understand what he's actually wired to respond to — energetic, sensual, direct, or otherwise — rather than assuming what worked early on will still work now.
Desire responds strongly to anticipation, novelty, and genuine curiosity — not pressure. Parts 4, 5, and 8 cover the specific, research-backed practices for rebuilding it deliberately, together.
Yes — the decline of early-relationship passion is a well-documented neurological pattern, not a failure. What's less automatic is what long-term couples can build instead: something more intentional and, per the research, potentially more satisfying than early-stage desire.
Somatic grounding, co-regulation, and post-conflict repair are woven throughout this retreat — held with HPCSA Registered Counsellors, fully immersive, away from daily distractions.
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