In many marriages, love doesn’t disappear — it just gets buried under exhaustion, routine, and unspoken frustration. It’s not about wanting to walk away or falling out of love. It’s more like a quiet burnout: feeling tired of the same conversations, unseen efforts, and the weight of carrying too much alone while acting like everything is fine. Even strong relationships with good intentions can slowly drift into this space.
Recovery rarely comes from big gestures. It starts with small, honest shifts: saying what you feel without blaming, making space for real conversation instead of distraction, and sharing the emotional load more fairly. It also means protecting the relationship from outside stress instead of letting it build tension between you.
With time, patience, and openness, burnout doesn’t have to signal the end — it can become the moment both partners start finding their way back to each other and rebuilding something steadier than before.


Leave a Reply