The house is finally quiet. Toys abandoned mid-floor, the dishwasher humming, a child monitor glowing on the nightstand. For many couples, this is the moment intimacy is supposed to happen—if only exhaustion, resentment, and a creeping sense of emotional distance didn’t arrive first.
The cultural narrative around sex after kids is unforgiving: desire fades, bodies change, romance becomes collateral damage. According to Rebecca Howard Eudy, that story is not only incomplete—it’s misleading. A licensed mental health counselor and AASECT-certified sex therapist, Eudy has spent more than a decade working with couples navigating the collision of parenthood, partnership, and sexuality. Her forthcoming book, Parents in Love, challenges the assumption that passion inevitably expires once children enter the picture.
“Parenthood doesn’t kill desire,” Eudy often explains in her clinical work. “It reshapes it.” The problem is that most couples are never taught how to adapt.
One of the earliest casualties of new parenthood is erotic energy, not because attraction disappears, but because survival takes over. Sleep deprivation, hormonal shifts, identity changes, and unequal labor all conspire to push sex to the margins. For many couples, what begins as a temporary lull quietly hardens into a long-term disconnect.
Eudy describes this as an attachment issue rather than a libido problem. Early parenthood, she notes, is rife with what therapists call “attachment injuries”—moments when partners feel unseen, unsupported, or emotionally abandoned during a period of intense vulnerability. These injuries often occur in the blur of midnight feedings and unspoken expectations, and they tend to linger long after the diapers are gone.
Compounding the problem is shame. Parents are surrounded by messaging that suggests they should feel grateful, fulfilled, and content. Admitting dissatisfaction—especially sexual dissatisfaction—can feel taboo. Many couples wait years before seeking help, convinced their struggles are personal failures rather than predictable developmental shifts.
Eudy’s work pushes back against that silence. She encourages couples to become what she calls “intimate and erotic allies,” a reframing that moves intimacy out of the realm of performance and into collaboration. Desire, in this model, isn’t something one partner owes the other. It’s something they build together, through emotional safety, honest communication, and intentional repair.
That repair often begins with language. For couples who find conversations about sex charged or awkward, Eudy recommends starting with curiosity rather than critique. Not “Why don’t we ever have sex anymore?” but “What feels hardest about intimacy right now?” It’s a subtle shift, but one that lowers defenses and invites vulnerability.
Science-backed tools play a role as well. Drawing from Emotionally Focused Therapy, Eudy helps couples identify patterns that keep them stuck—pursue-and-withdraw cycles, mismatched desire rhythms, and unspoken resentments. Small, consistent habits matter more than grand gestures: lingering touch in the kitchen, shared laughter, checking in emotionally before collapsing into bed.
Crucially, she cautions against turning intimacy into another item on an already overstuffed to-do list. Scheduling sex can be helpful, she acknowledges, but only if it’s framed as protected time for connection rather than obligation. Pleasure thrives on anticipation, not pressure.
One of the most persistent myths Eudy hopes parents will unlearn is the idea that intimacy must look the same as it did before children. Bodies change. Lives change. Desire evolves. The couples who fare best, she finds, are the ones willing to grieve what was while remaining curious about what could be.
For partners with mismatched desire, that curiosity becomes essential. Rather than aiming for perfect alignment, Eudy encourages couples to find a rhythm that honors both partners’ needs, recognizing that desire ebbs and flows across seasons of life.
Ultimately, Parents in Love is less about reclaiming a past version of passion than about building a sustainable, emotionally grounded intimacy for the present. Eudy’s hope is not that couples return to who they were before kids, but that they learn how to meet each other again—changed, tired, still capable of wanting and being wanted.
Because the truth, she insists, is quieter and more hopeful than the myths suggest: intimacy doesn’t disappear after kids. It waits for permission to evolve. rebeccaeudy.com














