Resentment doesn’t announce itself. It builds slowly, in layers, out of accumulated moments that each seemed small enough to let go. The affection you reached for that wasn’t returned. The connection you tried to create that went nowhere. The intimacy that’s been absent for so long you’ve stopped counting. The effort you keep putting in and the emptiness that keeps coming back.
And now there’s this low-grade anger sitting underneath everything. You don’t want to be this way. You’re not a resentful person by nature. But you’ve been giving and accommodating and waiting for things to be different for a long time, and somewhere along the way the waiting curdled into something harder.
That’s resentment. And in a marriage where the love feels absent or one-sided, it’s one of the most common things I see in men — and one of the least talked about.
Most men don’t know what to do with it. They don’t feel entitled to be angry — after all, they’re trying to be patient, trying to be understanding, trying not to make things worse. So they suppress it. They push it down and keep functioning and tell themselves it’ll get better. But suppressed resentment doesn’t go away. It leaks out in tone, in withdrawal, in the subtle ways a man stops being fully present in his own marriage. And that leaking makes everything harder — for him, for her, and for whatever chance the relationship might still have.
Here’s what I want you to understand about resentment: it’s not a character flaw. It’s a signal. And like any signal, the question isn’t how to silence it — it’s what it’s actually telling you.
In my experience, resentment in men almost always comes from one of two places. The first is unmet expectations that were never clearly stated. A man has needs — for connection, for affection, for intimacy, for being seen — and instead of expressing those needs clearly and directly, he hoped they would be met. He gave, and waited, and hoped that giving enough would eventually produce what he was looking for. It didn’t. And the gap between what he wanted and what he got accumulated quietly into resentment.
The second is a loss of self. A man who has been so focused on managing the relationship, keeping the peace, and accommodating his wife’s emotional state that he’s lost touch with his own needs, his own life, his own sense of direction. When a man doesn’t know what he wants or stops believing he’s entitled to want anything, the emptiness doesn’t just sit quietly. It ferments.
Both of these have the same root: a man whose relationship with himself isn’t solid enough to support a healthy relationship with someone else.
The path out of resentment isn’t to express it as anger, and it isn’t to keep suppressing it until it eats through everything. It starts with getting honest — with yourself first. What do you actually need? What have you been wanting that you haven’t been asking for directly? What parts of yourself have you been setting aside in the name of keeping the marriage going?
Those questions are uncomfortable. But they’re the right questions. Because the resentment is pointing at something real — something that matters to you that isn’t being honored. And a man who gets clear on that, who can name it and own it and start living in line with it, stops running on resentment. He runs on something more solid. Something that gives him the clarity and calm to show up differently — in the marriage, and in his own life.
Resentment is telling you something needs to change. The question is whether you’re willing to listen to it before it makes that decision for you.
Resentment is a message. Let’s figure out what it’s actually saying.
If the anger and emptiness have been building for a while and you’re not sure what to do with it, you don’t have to sit with that alone. Steve and Dan help men get honest about what’s driving the resentment — and what to do with that clarity. Your first call is free, and most men leave it feeling less stuck and more like themselves than they have in a long time.
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