
You've met the man of your life, fallen in love, and gotten married. It seems like it will always be like this! You will be overwhelmed with love for your man, and you will want to spend every minute with him.
Wait, this sounds more like a scene from a movie than real life. In fact, at each stage of a relationship we can experience different “degrees” of love. Today you are overwhelmed with feelings, and tomorrow you want to spend time alone and that’s okay!
And it also happens that love passes. It's sad, bitter, painful, but it's a variant of the norm, because nothing in this life can be eternal.
How do you know it's not just relationship fatigue?
You feel much better alone.
You've begun to notice that you're very comfortable alone, but your husband is weighing you down with his presence. And this goes on for weeks and months.
You don't compromise, you do what you think is right for you.
If you used to discuss your joint plans and seek compromises when necessary, now you are only interested in your own point of view. You are only concerned with personal comfort, and you are not particularly concerned about what your man will do.
Spend more time with friends
Every woman should have time for her friends in her life. It's a serious reason to think about your relationship with your husband if you spend much more time with your favorite "girls" than with him.
You don't see a man in him.
The most dangerous signal that literally trumpets that everything is bad in your relationship. Perhaps everything can be fixed if you notice this problem in time. Remember why you fell in love with your man, how your relationship began, what attracted you to him in the beginning.
You are increasingly having "your own" things to do that you used to do exclusively together.
Whatever it is, you're better off without a husband. Period. There's no love involved here.
If you, having read the above points, recognized yourself, do not panic. Soberly assess what is happening in your family now. Probably, everything can be fixed. And remember that relationships are built over years, and they can be destroyed in one second.