These 4 things ‘quietly kill intimacy’—what to do

These 4 things ‘quietly kill intimacy’—what to do


Many couples see intimacy as a “nice to have” in relationships. It’s sweet when it’s there, but not essential. This is especially true after the honeymoon period wears off. As a sex therapist and psychotherapist with over two decades of experience, I’m here to tell you that’s wrong.

Intimacy is the heartbeat of a thriving relationship. When intimacy breaks down, it doesn’t just affect your connection with a partner, it can impact your career, friendships, and physical health. It influences how you lead, communicate, make decisions, and feel about yourself. Clients often come to therapy for stress, anxiety, or performance issues at work, only for us to uncover intimacy gaps as the deeper source of misalignment. 

Intimacy, to bust another myth, is more than just getting laid or knowing the right positions. It’s about being open, honest, vulnerable, and real and allowing someone else to be the same with you.

Many of the biggest intimacy blockers are hiding in plain sight. Here are four surprising things that quietly kill intimacy — and what to do about them:

1. Your phone

2. Your ex

3. Your negativity bias

4. Your stress response

In sex therapy, we use the dual control model: Every person has “accelerators,” or things that turn them on, and “brakes,” which are things that shut them down. 

For some people, stress ramps up desire. For others, it’s a full stop. If you fall into the latter group, stress from anywhere in your life — your job, a parent’s illness, an unexpected bill — might be getting in the way. 

What to do about it

Track your patterns. Do you feel more open or closed off when stressed? Understanding your unique wiring, you can talk to your partner about it in a way that brings you closer.

Try something like: “I’ve noticed that when I’m overwhelmed, I need to feel supported before I can feel connected. I’m not rejecting you. I’m just maxed out. Helping with dinner or giving me time to reset really helps.”

You might want to cuddle on the couch, take a walk, or talk about what’s on your mind. Intimacy is more than just sex. Small moments of closeness count.

Be curious about your partner’s accelerators and brakes, too. Ask what helps them feel connected, supported, and seen. These conversations don’t have to be perfect. They just need to be honest. That kind of exchange is intimacy in action.

Chamin Ajjan, LCSW, A-CBT, CST is the CEO and Clinical Director of Chamin Ajjan Psychotherapy. She completed her undergraduate work at the University of California, Berkeley, and graduate school at Columbia University School of Social Work. She is an AASECT Certified Sex Therapist who received intensive and rigorous postgraduate training at The Modern Institute for Sex Therapy. She is also the author of “Seeking Soulmate: Ditch The Dating Game and Find Real Connection″ and an expert instructor in CNBC Make It’s online course Become an Effective Communicator: Master Public Speaking.

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