Have you ever noticed you’re talking every single day… but somehow you still feel alone in your marriage?
You’re not fighting. There’s no crisis. Nothing dramatic happened.
And yet… something feels off.
You’re coordinating schedules. Talking about dinner. Discussing the kids. Maybe even watching shows together.
But emotionally? You feel distant.
Friend, this is one of the most common midlife marriage struggles — and almost nobody talks about it.
But now I am.
I want to take you back to a season in my life that, on the outside, looked full and exciting.
This was after my youngest left for college. I had decided to captain my own USTA women’s local tennis team.
Now let me just tell you—I loved tennis. I started playing right after my youngest daughter was born, and it became something that was just mine. And years later, I decided I didn’t just want to play on someone else’s team… I wanted to build my own.
So, I found a co-captain. We recruited players. We built a roster of 15 to 20 women.
And if you’ve ever managed that many competitive women trying to give equal playing time and still win matches… you already know.
There were lineups to create. Texts to answer. Phone calls about hurt feelings. Conflict to smooth over. Schedules to coordinate.
There was… drama.
And I slowly became consumed by it.
What started as something fun and life-giving slowly became my primary focus. I was thinking about it constantly. On the phone constantly. Strategizing constantly.
And during that time, my husband and I were… fine.
Not bad. Not fighting. Not disconnected in any obvious way.
But if I’m honest? We felt more like roommates.
We were living parallel lives.
Have you ever felt unseen even though nothing is technically wrong?
I remember thinking quietly in my own heart, “Is this just what marriage becomes after this many years?”
And that thought scared me.
Let that sit for a second.
The Real Issue Wasn’t Conflict — It Was Drift
Here’s what I eventually realized.
Emotional intimacy doesn’t usually explode. It fades.
It fades when:
- Attention shifts
- Priorities quietly reorder
- Busyness replaces curiosity
- Comfort replaces connection
In midlife marriage especially, we are managing:
- Careers
- Aging parents
- Adult children
- Personal interests
- Church responsibilities
- Health changes
- Hormonal shifts
And somewhere along the way, connection stops being intentional.
Not because love is gone.
But because energy is gone.
Comfort is beautiful. But comfort without curiosity leads to distance.
And I had stopped being curious.
The Wake-Up Realization
The turning point for me wasn’t dramatic.
It was subtle.
I began to notice that I had plenty of emotional energy for tennis drama… but very little left for my marriage.
That was hard to admit.
I wasn’t angry at him. I wasn’t disappointed in him.
I was distracted.
And distraction can slowly erode emotional intimacy.
No big fight required.
Just drift.
What Emotional Intimacy Actually Is
Let’s define this clearly.
Emotional intimacy is:
- Feeling known
- Feeling prioritized
- Feeling chosen
- Feeling safe to share thoughts and feelings
- Feeling like you matter
You can live in the same house. Sleep in the same bed. Eat at the same table.
And still not feel emotionally connected.
That’s the pain so many midlife wives don’t know how to name.
It’s not crisis.
It’s distance.
3 Easy Shifts to Rebuild Emotional Intimacy
These are simple. But don’t underestimate them.
Ask One Question You Don’t Already Know the Answer To
Not: “What time are you leaving?” “Did you pay that bill?” “What do you want for dinner?”
Ask something that makes him think.
“What’s been weighing on you lately?” “What’s something you’re looking forward to?” “What’s been stressing you that I may not see?”
Curiosity reignites connection.
When someone feels interesting again, intimacy grows.
Sit Beside Him Instead of Across From Him
This sounds small.
But proximity changes energy.
When you sit beside instead of across:
- Shoulders align
- Bodies soften
- It feels less confrontational, more united
It’s subtle — but powerful.
Your nervous systems calm when you are physically closer.
And emotional intimacy follows nervous system safety.
Put the Phone Down First
This one convicted me.
Scrolling drains emotional availability.
If you want connection, someone has to go first.
Let it be you.
Five intentional minutes of undistracted presence can do more than an hour of half-attention.
The Internal Shift That Changed Everything
Here’s what shifted for me personally.
I stopped seeing my marriage as something that would automatically maintain itself.
I realized emotional intimacy requires cultivation.
Just like that tennis team required strategy and effort…
So did my marriage.
And when I redirected my energy—not in a frantic way, not in a “try harder” way—but in a present, intentional way…
The emotional temperature between us began to warm again.
Not overnight.
But steadily.
If You’re Reading and Thinking…
“If nothing is wrong… but something feels missing…”
You are not broken.
Your marriage is not failing.
You may simply need intentional emotional reconnection.
Midlife marriage doesn’t fall apart dramatically most of the time.
It drifts quietly.
But what drifts can be redirected.
Faith Perspective (Gentle, Not Heavy)
God designed marriage for companionship.
Not just co-management.
Not just shared responsibilities.
Companionship.
And sometimes He allows us to feel the distance so, we’ll be motivated to close it.
Not with pressure.
But with presence.
Reflection Question
Let me leave you with this:
Where has my emotional energy been going lately?
And…
What would shift if I brought even 10% more of that intentional energy back into my marriage?
Invitation
If this post felt personal… if you thought, “She’s describing us”…
Come join us inside my private Facebook community: Empty Nest Wives — Rebuilding Intimacy & Connection.
It’s a safe place to talk about this season honestly.
And friend — you are not too late.
Emotional intimacy can absolutely be rebuilt.
And sometimes it starts with something as small as asking one new question… and putting your phone down first.
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Monette Sedberry is the host of the weekly podcast Midlife Marriage Makeover, where she encourages Christian empty-nester wives to rebuild connection, spark fresh joy, and invite God back into the center of their marriage. A lifelong learner and storyteller, Monette shares practical wisdom, faith-filled mindset shifts, and honest reflections from her own journey—both on her podcast and here at The Best-Life Project. Her words flow with honesty and compassion, giving women hope that change is possible.
Monette lives in Albuquerque, NM with her husband Leland. They have three adult children and love adventuring, traveling, and savoring this new season of life together. Learn more at: http://linktr.ee/Miracle_Marriage

Great article! I agree that it’s the little things…sitting next to each other, asking open ended questions, giving full attention when your spouse is talking & etc. Wonderful reminders!