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You can’t hurt me and then dictate the terms of my healing. That line sets the tone for a real, practical conversation about sex, trust, and emotional safety in marriage and why the bedroom often reflects what’s happening everywhere else.
We break down a crucial distinction that many couples miss: low libido versus low desire for your spouse. Low libido can be physiological or psychological, shaped by stress, burnout, medication, hormones, and mental health, and it can be diagnosed and treated. Low desire for your spouse usually points to relationship issues, the unspoken stories, the conversations you keep avoiding, the apology that never landed, and pain that never got named. When you misdiagnose the problem, you end up solving the wrong thing and paying for it with distance.
We also talk about why conflict and disconnection crush intimacy, and how to prioritize repair without turning sex into a duty. That means timelines, defining what “healing” looks like, and rebuilding intimacy in safe steps. We get into what real repentance looks like after betrayal, how to tell performance from change by watching patterns, and why the willingness to have uncomfortable conversations is a sign of maturity. Then we address self-inflicted desire loss, especially the comparison trap fueled by social media, and how love languages and spoken appreciation can protect the marriage you’re actually living.
If you want a healthier Christian marriage, stronger communication, and a sex life rooted in trust, press play. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the one idea you’re taking into your relationship.
By Buli MakhuboYou can’t hurt me and then dictate the terms of my healing. That line sets the tone for a real, practical conversation about sex, trust, and emotional safety in marriage and why the bedroom often reflects what’s happening everywhere else.
We break down a crucial distinction that many couples miss: low libido versus low desire for your spouse. Low libido can be physiological or psychological, shaped by stress, burnout, medication, hormones, and mental health, and it can be diagnosed and treated. Low desire for your spouse usually points to relationship issues, the unspoken stories, the conversations you keep avoiding, the apology that never landed, and pain that never got named. When you misdiagnose the problem, you end up solving the wrong thing and paying for it with distance.
We also talk about why conflict and disconnection crush intimacy, and how to prioritize repair without turning sex into a duty. That means timelines, defining what “healing” looks like, and rebuilding intimacy in safe steps. We get into what real repentance looks like after betrayal, how to tell performance from change by watching patterns, and why the willingness to have uncomfortable conversations is a sign of maturity. Then we address self-inflicted desire loss, especially the comparison trap fueled by social media, and how love languages and spoken appreciation can protect the marriage you’re actually living.
If you want a healthier Christian marriage, stronger communication, and a sex life rooted in trust, press play. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the one idea you’re taking into your relationship.