What this actually looks like
It almost never starts dramatically. It starts with small flinches you don’t even register as flinches at first.
- Your friend hugs you at the school gate the way she always has, and you stiffen, and you don’t know why.
- The grandchild climbs onto your lap, all wriggling, and you brace before you can stop yourself.
- Your partner goes to stroke your back as you fall asleep, the way they have done for years, and your skin crawls.
- Your mother takes your hand at the hospital, and you have to fight not to take it back.
- You sit at the hairdresser’s having your hair washed and it is suddenly unbearable.
- Your clothes feel different on your skin. Bras you wore for years now itch. Labels feel like sandpaper.
- You have started crossing your arms in front of you in conversations, without having decided to.
- The dog wants to sit on your lap and you nudge him off, and feel terrible for it.
None of these are personality changes. They are not signs that you have stopped loving anyone. They are a nervous system that is overloaded, and a body in chemical change, and a brain that has become very, very tired.
You have not stopped loving anyone. Your skin has temporarily stopped being a welcoming country.
Why it happens
A combination of things, most of them invisible, all of them real.
- Oestrogen drops affect skin sensitivity. Some women become hypersensitive, some get itchy, some get the prickling skin people call “formication.” Touch that felt nice last year can feel intrusive now.
- Your nervous system has been on for too long. Sleep deprivation, the mental load, perimenopausal anxiety, all of it. A nervous system that is already at 9 out of 10 has no capacity for the small, repeated touches of ordinary life.
- Sensory overload. The lights are too bright, the noise is too loud, the labels itch. Touch is just one more channel that is full.
- Trauma can resurface in midlife. If there is anything in your past you have never quite dealt with, midlife often brings it back up to the surface, and the body responds.
- Hormonal contraception and HRT can affect it too, in both directions. Worth telling your GP if it changes after you start anything new.
Or the opposite shape, when the touch is there but the feeling isn’t
For other women, or for the same woman at different times, the problem is not flinching. It is the opposite. The touch does not repel you. It just does not land. You can feel their hand on your shoulder the way you can feel a coat on your arm. There it is. It registers. It just does not mean anything.
It is one of the strangest, most disorienting versions of all of this, because everything looks fine from the outside. They hug you. You hug them back. You go through the motions of being a couple. And nothing about any of it makes you feel held.
You know the touch used to mean things. The electricity when their arm went round you. The way a hand on the small of your back used to land somewhere warm. The little jolt of a kiss in the kitchen. None of that has been there for a while, and you cannot make it come back by trying.
It is not coldness. It is not having stopped loving them. It is wiring that has gone quiet. Wires can come back online.
What this version can feel like
- You feel a hand on your skin, but it does not register as affection. It registers as pressure.
- Kisses feel mechanical. Not unpleasant. Just… not anything.
- You can be in a long embrace and your mind has gone somewhere else within a few seconds.
- You do not reach for them in the kitchen anymore, because there is not a pull to reach.
- The idea of sex does not horrify you. It just does not land. Like reading a recipe in a language you used to speak.
- You can stroke your own arm and feel it, properly. You can stroke your partner’s arm and it is just… a movement.
Why this happens too
The same hormonal cascade that affects sexual desire affects emotional sensation more widely. Oestrogen is involved in mood, in attachment, in how your brain processes pleasure. When it drops, the small electrical sparks of intimacy can go quiet at the same time, even when you can still see the love perfectly clearly.
This is not made up. It is not in your head. It is one of the more painful kinds of midlife change because there is nothing visible to point at, and you cannot show it to anyone.
It is also one of the loneliest, because the conversation about it is so hard to have. “I love you, but when you touch me I feel nothing” is a sentence almost nobody manages to say out loud, even to themselves. So it goes unsaid, and the muffling looks, from the outside, like coldness or distance, when it is neither.
What sometimes helps with the muffled version
- Naming it to yourself first. “The feeling is quiet, not gone.” That sentence shrinks the panic.
- Initiating, not receiving. A hand held while you watch television. A hand placed on the back of their neck while they stand at the sink. The wiring sometimes comes back online slowly when the touch is chosen rather than received.
- A slower kind of closeness. Sitting against each other. Reading in the same room. The kind of nearness that does not ask anything of either of you. Some women find the feeling returns through proximity long before it returns through touch.
- Telling them, gently. Not “I feel nothing when you touch me,” which is unbearable to hear. Something more like “Something has gone quiet in me at the moment. It is not about you. I do not want us to stop trying.” The Letter Generator can help find the words.
- HRT. For some women, the muffled feeling lifts within a few months of starting it. For some, not. Worth a proper, unhurried conversation with your GP.
- Not panicking. The wiring being quiet does not mean the wiring is broken. It does not mean the marriage is over. It does not mean you are cold. It means a body in change has, for now, turned the volume down on something it used to play loudly.
The grandchildren part, which is the hardest
You can explain a lot of things to a lot of people. You cannot explain to a five-year-old why granny doesn’t want a cuddle today.
If a small person you love is reading your body as “granny doesn’t want me,” that is one of the most painful things in the world to live with. Especially because you do want them. You just cannot do the cuddle today in the way they want it.
Some small things that help, even imperfectly:
- Choose the shape of the affection yourself. Initiating touch (a quick squeeze of the hand, a kiss on the top of their head, sitting close on the sofa) is much more tolerable for most women than receiving it. Reach for them on your terms.
- Offer an alternative. “Granny’s feeling a bit tired today, but I’d love to read you a story / hold your hand / sit next to you.” Children accept this much more easily than we expect.
- Don’t make it permanent in your head. This will pass. Most women find their tolerance for touch returns over time. The grandchildren will not remember an episode. They will remember a relationship.
- If you can, tell their parent quietly. So that nobody feels rejected, and you have one less thing to mask.
They will not remember a difficult cuddle when they were five. They will remember a granny who loved them. You are still her.
The partner part
The partner part is where this hurts the most often, and where the shame is the loudest. Because they don’t mean any harm, and they are watching the closeness disappear without understanding why.
The thing they need to hear, and that you may need to find a way to say, is this: I have not stopped loving you. My body is doing something I cannot control, and it is not about you.
If you cannot say it out loud, you can write it down. The Letter Generator has a Letter to my partner option, with a tone that does not blame either of you.
There is a longer page about the conversation itself, the mismatch between their version of intimacy and yours, the cycle of withdrawal and frustration, on The whole intimacy thing. And there is a page for your partner to read on their own, in the For Partners section, called Help for You. Both halves of this conversation deserve their own space.
What sometimes helps
- Permission to flinch without apology. A short sentence you can use without explaining each time: “Not right now, love. I’m sorry.” That is enough. You do not have to write an essay.
- Initiating, not receiving. When the touch is on your terms, in your direction, your body tolerates it far better. Reach for them before they reach for you.
- Firm pressure instead of light touch. Many women who cannot bear light, casual touch can still tolerate firm pressure, a long hug, a weighted blanket, leaning against someone. The nervous system reads the two very differently.
- Cooler skin, looser clothes, fewer labels. Sometimes the touch aversion is partly an overheating-and-irritated-skin problem. Cold cotton, no waistbands, a fan, helps more than it should.
- HRT. For many women, the skin sensitivity and the touch aversion both ease within a few months of starting HRT. Worth raising with your GP.
- Telling one person. A friend, your sister, SAM. Holding this alone makes it bigger than it is.
- Letting yourself off the hook. You are not cold. You are not frigid. You are not broken. You are a body in change, asking, temporarily, for a little less.
When it lifts
For most women, this does ease. Sometimes within months of getting better sleep, lower stress, or starting HRT. Sometimes more gradually, over a year or two as the body settles into its new normal. Sometimes it comes and goes, worse when other symptoms flare, easier when life eases off.
It does not have to define your relationships. You can hold the line of not right now while still being someone who is loved and loves back. You are allowed to need less touch for a while. The people who actually love you can hold that.
SAM is here any time, day or night. No agenda, no judgement, no list of helplines fired at you the moment things get real.
Talk to SAM