Woman Reflects On Husband Who Left A Happy Marriage Because Once A Week “Wasn’t Enough”

In most relationship autopsies, there is a clear villain: a cheater, a deadbeat, or a toxic personality. But for the original poster (OP), the end of her six-year relationship feels less like a tragedy and more like a baffling exercise in poor decision-making.

By all accounts, her husband was a “great partner”, they shared hobbies, split chores, and genuinely enjoyed each other’s company. The only sticking point was a mismatched libido, which they had compromised on with a steady “once-a-week” schedule.

However, after years of building a life together in a home the OP owned, the husband decided that once a week was no longer sustainable for his happiness. He walked away from a stable, high-income household and his beloved pets in search of more frequent intimacy.

Now, he’s living in a cramped, pet-free apartment, selling his prized antique car, and struggling financially, all while getting zero action. Scroll down to see if the internet thinks the husband made a brave choice for his needs or if he’s, as the OP suggests, “kind of an idiot.”

Woman reflects on the end of her marriage after her husband left over a mismatch

Woman Reflects On Husband Who Left A Happy Marriage Because Once a Week "Wasn't Enough"
not the actual photo

'My husband is ending our marriage because we weren’t intimate as often as he wanted, and so far it isn’t going like he planned and I’m not surprised but I...

I was originally going make another post with this account but that never happened,

so here I am further down the line in this situation. Just venting not asking for advice,

as all decisions have already been made.

My husband (37M) and I (34F) have been together for 6 years, married for 3.

We have had a very happy relationship, even he says so.

We share a lot of hobbies and get along extremely well.

We never fight, only have disagreements sometimes, we split the chores evenly,

contribute to bills proportionally,

and generally like doing all the same things for entertainment.

What’s the problem then? This doesn’t sound like the typical Reddit post

of “he’s really great except for how horrible he is” because it isn’t.

He’s truly a great partner and a kind thoughtful person.

The problem is a difficult but common one: s__.

He wasn’t getting it as often as he would have liked.

And I don’t mean we had a dead bedroom, we were having s__ once a week,

I was making sure of it because he had expressed these concerns before.

When we started dating I knew we were going to have mismatched s__ drives,

mine is pretty low and has been an issue in some previous relationships.

I’m pretty neutral on s__ and could go months without it and be perfectly fine.

And before anyone says anything no it isn’t a hormonal problem I’ve been to doctors,

and it isn’t because I’ve never had good s__, I have, this is just how I am.

He didn’t seem to mind, in the beginning anyway.

Over time he seemed to get a bit more frustrated with it so we talked about it

and as a compromise decided that s__ would happen once a week.

I could handle that much. And that’s what’s been happening,

until a few months ago when he said he was still feeling frustrated

and really wanted it every other day or a few times a week.

I said I couldn’t do that, that’s why we went to once a week

because that’s what I can handle. He said he didn’t think he could be happy like that.

After 6 years. It took you 6 years and getting married to figure that out.

And here we are now, separated, him moved out.

See, it was my house we were living that I bought before I met him.

It’s also my pets we were living with that I had before I met him.

We had a happy home and a happy little family, no kids yet but we were talking about it.

Now half his things are in storage because he has a few hobbies

that take up a lot of space and he can’t fit everything into the tiny apartment he had to get.

He had to sell his antique car because he couldn’t park it at his new place

and I wouldn’t let him keep it here. He’s also complaining about money now

because I make more than twice what he makes and I was paying more than half of the bills.

I’m not sure if he’s started looking to date, I told him I didn’t care

if he did while we were getting the divorce going.

I know he wasn’t cheating, he was very loyal,

so there’s no other woman he had on the line already.

I’m sure he’ll sort it out and get settled eventually,

but for now he lives alone in a cramped apartment

that doesn’t allow pets with almost none of the things that he did for fun getting no s__ at all.

All because once a week wasn’t good enough. Are you kidding.

Don’t get me wrong I’m taking no pleasure in it, but it’s just like kind of funny to me?

Like you picked this and now you’re miserable.

I’ve spent the last few months being devastated and upset beyond belief

and I’m starting to pick myself up now and realize how ridiculous the situation actually is.

He’s a really good person, but maybe kind of an i__ot.

The transition from a stable, high-functioning partnership to total separation over sexual frequency is a uniquely modern tragedy.

A universal emotional truth in this situation is that incompatibility is not the same as a lack of love; two people can be functionally perfect for one another in every room of the house except the bedroom, and for many, that singular gap eventually swallows the entire foundation.

In this story, the conflict centers on the instability of sexual maintenance. When a couple negotiates a “frequency compromise,” they are often operating on two different psychological frequencies.

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The lower-libido partner views the compromise as a maximum output that requires effort, while the higher-libido partner often views it as a bare minimum they hope will grow.

Over six years, this created a quiet erosion of the husband’s satisfaction until the gap became psychologically unbearable.

While there is a touch of irony in the husband’s current misery, there is a different perspective to consider: the “starvation” paradox.

To the husband, the transition from once-a-week sex to zero sex in a cramped apartment might seem like an illogical trade, but in his mind, the once-a-week frequency was a constant reminder of what he wasn’t getting.

Psychologists often note that for high-libido individuals, sex is a primary form of emotional validation. Being in a marriage where he felt he had to “negotiate” for intimacy likely made him feel chronically rejected. He didn’t choose the cramped apartment because he liked it; he chose the possibility of a future where he is wanted with the same intensity he gives.

Relationship experts highlight that mismatched desire is one of the most common reasons for divorce among “happy” couples. It is a conflict where neither person is “wrong,” yet both feel deeply wronged. When sexual frequency becomes a chore for one and a metric of being loved for the other, the relationship enters a state of chronic stress.

Even if everything else is perfect, the lack of spontaneous, shared desire can make the higher-drive partner feel like they are living with a roommate they are deeply in love with but can never fully reach.

Furthermore, focusing on the husband’s material losses, the car, the pets, the house, is a natural stage of grief for the partner left behind, helping to process the anger that he valued a physical need over their built life.

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This expert insight frames the husband not as an “idiot,” but as someone who reached a saturation point of dissatisfaction. He is currently suffering the material consequences of his decision, but to him, those may be preferable to the emotional weight of feeling unwanted.

Conversely, a neutral stance on s__ is a valid biological baseline; the partner is not “broken,” simply different. The tragedy is that their functional perfection couldn’t bridge a gap rooted in biology. By letting him go, the partner is actually freeing both of them to find match-aligned baselines.

The husband may be miserable now, but he is betting on a future where he doesn’t have to “count days” to feel loved and the partner is now free to have a home where their neutrality isn’t a problem to be solved.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Commenters argue that “maintenance” or “pity” s__ is often worse for a high-libido partner than no s__ at all

Sayeds21 − I don’t think I could be in a marriage

where I knew the other person was having s__ with me once a week

just to make me happy and not because they actually desired me.

When I know the other person isn’t into it, it instantly kills it for me.

That’s no way to live, even if things suck for him right now,

I’m sure he will sort himself out eventually.

Strawbrawry − "I knew we were going to have mismatched s__ drives"

"It's been an issue in the past" and "He didn’t seem to mind, in the beginning anyway.

Over time he seemed to get a bit more frustrated with it so we talked about it

and as a compromise decided that s__ would happen once a week.

"I could handle that much." are the big quotes that stand out here.

You absolutely owe no one s__ but this seemed like an issue from the get go

and you clocked it. Giving him a pity f__k and hiding that you hate it once a week

was never going to make either of you happy.

Neutral on s__ doesn't normally sound like you are being forced to do something.

Edit: this isn't a "girl power" comment either sorry to say.

OP kinda sucks here as she went in knowing she wouldn't change and expected him to.

OP you wasted your time and his on this relationship and you're taking joy

(you are stop beating around the bush) in his suffering after gas lighting for years.

It's in your own words how bad this was and that's crazy you still posted.

You both need therapy, this is a wild way to do relationships, if it can be called that.

Eezergoode1990 − I’d rather no s__, than duty s__ with someone once a week

because that’s as much as they can handle.

Many users actually praised the husband for leaving

TheFinalPhilter − maybe he is kind of an i__ot I don’t know recognizing a problem

and starting divorce before the resentment starts is not that dumb of an idea if you ask me.

Sure it might suck for him now but he can improve this situation.

That beats him staying and becoming resentful or eventually cheating on you in my book.

rmnc-5 − He was honest and chose to leave before things got to a point

where either resentment or infidelity would happen.

If you read some of the infidelity subs, you’ll see this is not a common thing at all.

You were just incompatible in this department.

feminist_chocolate − I’m on the other side of this.

Left my husband for similar reasons, except in my case it was basically no s__.

I would have happily taken a once a week deal, but I can understand how,

if you have a really high s__ drive, it might still not be enough.

S__ is part of health, and for me, while yes right now I also don’t have s__

because I’m not ready to date yet, but I know I will have a different relationship in the future

where I will be cherished and desired also physically.

And that’s a good choice for me.

So I don’t think he’s an i__ot, he is doing what he feels like he needs to do

in order to be happy in the long run.

This group points out that nobody is at fault, but both were “doomed” from the start

lionbridges − You two sound incompatible. A mismatched S__ drive might work out

for a few years and sometimes it works out for a lifetime,

but it's also okay that it wasn't enough for him.

It's better to split before he cheats or resentment grows.

InfamousCup7097 − Sounds like you both were incompatible from the beginning.

You tried. He tried. It didn't work. He decided the rest of his years in an incompatible

relationship weren't worth a car, hobbies, or money.

Some people prioritize different things. Sometimes, in a marriage, people grow.

Things change. Hormones adjust. Wants and needs become different.

Communication and compromise are important in a relationship

if it is going to be a happy one that lasts.

You can be hurt by his decision, but he also can be hurt

by you dismissing him communicating what he feels he needs in a relationship.

There are other types of intimacy that could have been a possible add-in to

increase physical satisfaction but from what your tone gives off

it really sounds like you were immovable.

ghostoftommyknocker − I think the only daft thing he's done is clearly not think

through the logistics of life after divorce before doing it, and that's the biggest reason

why he's struggling now

he didn't manage the expectations of day-to-day living,

so he's dealing with a shock to the system.

The decision to divorce because of s__ual incompatibility isn't a stupid decision

and doesn't make someone an i__ot. I say this as a naturally low libido woman

who is also asexual. I've also lost past relationships because of libido incompatibility.

S__ual compatibility is important for everyone (including those of us

who are happy with minimal or even no s__ -- we need compatible partners, too).

But, he definitely should have got his financial and belongings ducks in a row

as part of his divorce planning. It would have made things a little less stressful

for both of you on the practical side,

but it probably wouldn't have made the emotional side much easier.

This story is a sobering look at the “Intimacy vs. Stability” gamble, where a functional, high-earning marriage was traded for a potential increase in physical connection.

On one side, we have a husband who reached a breaking point, deciding that a “once-a-week compromise” was a slow-motion recipe for lifelong resentment.

For him, sexual compatibility wasn’t a luxury; it was the foundation he needed to feel truly happy, even if walking away meant losing his house, his pets, and his financial safety net.

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On the other side, the OP is experiencing the “Post-Separation Irony.” From her perspective, her husband blew up a near-perfect life, complete with a devoted partner, financial ease, and shared hobbies, all for a frequency of sex he is currently getting “zero” of in a cramped apartment.

The irony is sharp: he left because once a week wasn’t enough, and now he has nothing but his regrets and a lack of parking for his antique car. It’s a classic case of someone realizing that while the “grass is greener” on the other side, the water bill over there is much higher.

Do you think the husband’s ultimatum was fair given the lifelong stakes of sexual frustration, or did he overplay his hand by sacrificing a “happy home” for an uncertain upgrade?

How would you juggle being a partner’s keeper when their needs are fundamentally different from your own? Share your hot takes below!

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