
Love isn’t supposed to feel this heavy — but lately, it does.
The sighs are louder, the silences longer, and even small conversations feel like work. Nothing “big”
is wrong, yet something feels deeply off. You’re not alone, and you’re not crazy.
What you’re feeling has a name — and understanding it might just sa… Continues…
There comes a point in many marriages where love is still present, but it feels buried under fatigue,
routine, and unspoken resentment. You’re not plotting an escape. You’re not falling out of love. You’re just tired — tired of repeating
the same conversations, tired of feeling unseen, tired of carrying more than your share or pretending you’re fine.
That quiet exhaustion is marriage burnout, and it can happen even in good relationships with good people who never meant to drift this far apart.
Healing doesn’t come from grand romantic gestures; it starts with small, honest moments. Naming what you’re feeling without blame.
Choosing ten minutes of real conversation instead of another numb scroll. Rebalancing the invisible load so one person isn’t drowning.
Protecting each other from outside stress instead of turning on each other. With support, patience, and courage,
burnout can become a turning point — not the end, but the moment you both decide to come back home to the marriage you still want to build.