Why Intimacy Starts to Fade, with Dr Dan Sneider
A lot of men don’t think they have a problem with intimacy. They just feel a bit distant. A bit shut down. Less connected than they used to be to their partner, to sex, or to themselves. This episode goes right into that space.
I’m joined by Dr. Dan Sneider. Dan is a therapist; however, this isn’t a lecture or a list of techniques. It’s a conversation grounded in his own lived experience and how he learned early on to shut parts of himself down, how that showed up in his relationships, and what it actually took for him to stay present instead of withdrawing when things got uncomfortable.
We talk about how intimacy doesn’t usually disappear overnight. It fades quietly. How many men default to pulling away rather than risking saying the wrong thing. And how habits that look like “sex issues” are often really about safety, control, and not knowing how to stay emotionally exposed without feeling weak or overwhelmed.
Dan shares what he’s learned, first in his own life, then through years of working alongside men, including:
- why emotional closeness can feel threatening, even in good relationships
- how shame and self-protection show up as silence, distraction, or distance
- why midlife often brings intimacy problems to the surface
- and how connection starts with honesty, not performance or confidence
This episode is for men who care about their relationships but don’t always know how to talk about what’s going on inside them. Men who haven’t “checked out”, but who feel something has shifted and don’t want to lose what matters.
It’s not about fixing yourself. It’s about understanding why intimacy feels hard and what actually helps.
If you want to find out more about Dan’s work, visit his website where you can also download his free guide: https://www.growthandgratitudetherapy.com/the-intimacy-shift.