What to Do When Your Husband Won’t Talk About Feelings

It’s one of the loneliest feelings in a marriage: lying next to someone every night who won’t let you in. You’re not asking for much — just to feel known, to feel like you’re facing life together. But every time you try to go deeper, he goes quiet, gets defensive, or finds a way to end the conversation before it starts.

Understand What You’re Actually Dealing With

Before deciding what to do, it helps to understand which category your husband falls into:

Category 1: He wants to connect but doesn’t know how. Most common. He wasn’t taught emotional language and finds feelings discussions uncomfortable.

Category 2: He’s aware of the problem but resistant to changing it. He knows you want more depth but isn’t interested in providing it.

Category 3: The emotional unavailability is part of a controlling pattern. Silence and stonewalling are being used deliberately to avoid accountability.

What Not to Do

Don’t pursue harder when he shuts down — the more you push, the more he retreats. Don’t have the conversation when you’re already in conflict. Don’t frame it as something wrong with him. Don’t set and immediately abandon boundaries.

What to Do Instead

Name your need without blame: ‘I need to feel connected to you. I miss feeling close. Can we find a way to work on that together?’ This positions it as something to build together, not a verdict on his failure.

Choose your timing carefully — after dinner, on a walk, at a relaxed moment. Start smaller than you think you need to.

The Role of Couples Therapy

If direct conversations haven’t worked, couples therapy isn’t a last resort — it’s often the most efficient path forward. Many men who resist emotional conversation with their partners find it easier in a therapeutic setting. The research on couples therapy outcomes is genuinely encouraging.

When to Reconsider What You’re Accepting

There’s a point — and only you know where it is — where working harder on connection stops being love and starts being a way of avoiding a harder truth.

If your husband is unwilling to work on the marriage, dismisses your needs as unreasonable, or uses emotional withdrawal as punishment — you deserve to have that acknowledged for what it is.

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Mental Health Disclaimer:

The information on this site is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional mental health care. We are a non-profit organization committed to increasing access to mental wellness education. If you are experiencing a crisis or need immediate support in the United States, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

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