Author: Leslie T
Many marriage counselors call this the “crazy cycle”:
She doesn’t feel loved:
-> She may become colder, critical, defensive, or controlling.
-> She might say sharp things, withdraw affection, or stop opening her heart.
He doesn’t feel respected:
-> He may become distant, shut down, work longer hours, or get more irritable.
-> He might respond with silence, sarcasm, or anger.
Then it loops:
1. Her feeling:
• “He doesn’t care. I’m alone in this. Why should I be gentle if he clearly doesn’t love me?”
2. His feeling:
• “Nothing I do is good enough. She talks down to me. Why should I give more love if I only get criticism?”
Over time this can lead to:
Emotional distance – you start living like roommates, not partners.
More frequent or more intense arguments – the same themes keep coming up.
Loss of safety – both feel like they can’t be vulnerable without being hurt or misunderstood.
Temptation to escape – work, hobbies, friends, phone, or even other relationships begin to feel “easier” than home.
Spiritual weariness (if you’re people of faith) – it feels harder to pray together, worship, or feel God’s presence in the relationship.
Underneath all of it, though, are two very human, very vulnerable needs:
The wife’s deep need: “Please love me. See me. Choose me.”
The husband’s deep need: “Please respect me. Believe in me. Don’t see me as a failure.”
When those needs go unmet, both people are hurting, not just “misbehaving.”
To begin healing, usually one person has to choose to step off the cycle first, by:
Offering unearned kindness (love or respect) even when they don’t “feel” like it.
Naming the pattern gently:
• “I’m feeling unloved / disrespected, and I think we’re caught in a loop. I don’t want to keep living this way. Can we talk about how to change it together?”.