So this whole marriage fear and hunger thing? Yeah, it got real personal for me last month. My cousin Lisa called me crying at 2 AM because her husband just dropped the “I need space” bomb after eight years together. She was shaking saying “I don’t even recognize him anymore,” and that got me thinking – what the hell causes this?

Started digging right there in my pajamas. First stop: texting married buddies. My boy Mike replied instantly saying he almost filed papers last year because every conversation felt like walking through minefields. Then I hit the books – not that fancy psychology crap, just normal people forums where folks spill real tea.
Two big patterns kept slapping me in the face:
- Money ghosts haunting the relationship – Turns out when bills pile up faster than paychecks, couples turn into roommates real quick. Lisa finally admitted they’d been drowning in credit card debt for three years, hiding it from each other like some messed-up game.
- Emotional starvation diet – Mike showed me his calendar from last summer. Dude had back-to-back work trips for two months straight. His wife literally counted – they’d gone 43 days without a proper conversation. No wonder she felt alone in a house with him.
So I tested theories on my own marriage. Saturday morning I dragged my wife Sarah to our messy kitchen table with two notebooks. “Write down what you’re scared about with us right now,” I told her. She wrote “growing apart” in big shaky letters. When I showed her my page saying same damn thing? We both cried over cold coffee.
Tried fixing it raw-dog style last week. No fancy dates – just made us sit on the porch every night after dinner. No phones allowed, just talking about stupid shit like that squirrel that keeps stealing our birdseed. Felt awkward as hell at first, but last night she actually reached for my hand first.
Key takeaway? That hunger feeling comes from starving each other’s basic needs. The fear kicks in when you stop being teammates against life’s crap. Simple? Yeah. Easy? Hell no. But watching Lisa and Mike pick up the pieces, I’ll take awkward porch talks over 2 AM disaster calls any day.
