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Relationship science

She Still Finds You Attractive. You Just Don't Know It.

By Elizaveta Shvets · July 9, 2026

New parents consistently underestimate how attracted their partner still is to them after a baby arrives — even though the attraction hasn't disappeared. A 2025 study tracking 59 couples daily from pregnancy through 15 weeks postpartum found that insecurity spiked sharply in both moms and dads, but desire for each other didn't vanish the way most people feared.

Researchers from UT Austin — Rachel Blickman, Marci Gleason, and Lisa Neff — asked couples to record daily diary entries through the entire transition to parenthood. Both mothers and fathers reported feeling more self-conscious about their bodies and less attractive. They expected their partner to notice, and assumed it meant something had shifted permanently.

The data didn't back that up. Partners were still tracking each other's signals, day by day. The perception gap — "she doesn't see me that way anymore" — turned out to be much bigger than the actual attraction gap. The study, published in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships and covered by Psychology Today in May 2026, found that new parents could accurately pick up on daily fluctuations in their partner's interest — meaning the signal was still there. They just weren't trusting it.

The real issue isn't that attraction disappears postpartum. It's that exhaustion, self-consciousness, and silence create a perception gap so wide that both people end up feeling invisible — at the same time.

What it means for you: The gap between "she doesn't notice me anymore" and "she's overwhelmed and can't show it right now" is the thing worth closing — not the attraction itself, which is probably more intact than either of you thinks.

Source: Psychology Today, May 2026 — based on Blickman, Gleason & Neff, Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 2025
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