My Spouse Gives More Importance to Friends Than to Me - I Feel Secondary in My Own Marriage. What Should I Do?
Published: October 27, 2025
The Email
I am a 31-year-old woman married for three years. My biggest pain is that my husband seems to value his friends more than me. He spends hours talking to them, goes out frequently with them, and shares his thoughts and feelings with them – but when it comes to me, he is quiet, distant, and uninterested.
If I ask for time together, he says I am overreacting or being possessive. If I express hurt, he says, “They are my friends, don’t be insecure.” I am not against his friendships, but I feel ignored and emotionally sidelined. I want to be his priority, not an afterthought. How do I make him understand that while friends are a part of life, marriage should be the emotional priority?
Understanding Emotional Priority in Marriage
Friendships are important. However, when a spouse consistently prioritizes friends over their partner, it creates emotional imbalance. Marriage is not about restricting friendships – it is about ensuring emotional energy is first invested in the marriage.
Signs You Are Being Emotionally Replaced
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Your spouse shares joys and struggles more with friends than with you
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You are excluded from social plans
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Friends’ needs and opinions outweigh yours
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You feel like an outsider in your own relationship
Love is shown through attention. When attention is diverted, emotional distance grows.
Why This Happens
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Lack of emotional awareness
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Fear of emotional responsibility
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Dependency on friends for validation
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Taking the marriage for granted
How to Restore Emotional Priority in Your Marriage
Step 1 - Express Your Feelings Gently
Say:
“I respect your friendships, but when I am constantly placed after them, I feel emotionally neglected. I want us to have a deeper connection too.”
This invites understanding, not resistance.
Step 2 - Rebuild Emotional Connection
Create moments of joy and companionship as a couple:
Step 3 - Avoid Competing with Friends
The goal is not to compete – it is to remind your spouse of the emotional bond that marriage represents.
Step 4 - Define Healthy Boundaries
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Certain times (dinner, evenings, weekends) should be couple-focused
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Friends should not be involved in marital decisions
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Emotional dependency should shift towards the marriage
Step 5 - If Ignored Consistently
If your spouse continues to neglect your emotional needs and prioritizes friends excessively, professional counselling may be required to address deeper relational imbalance.
Final Thought
Friendship adds color to life – but marriage is the canvas upon which that life is painted. When the canvas is ignored, the picture eventually fades.
You are not asking to be the only person in your spouse’s life – you are simply asking to be the most emotionally significant one, and that is a healthy marital expectation.
Tags: Help for Heart, Marriage Neglect, Emotional Priority, Spouse and Friends Conflict, Relationship Guidance
If You Are Feeling Sidelined
You may write privately to kovaiyellowpages@gmail.com for compassionate guidance. You deserve to be emotionally valued in your marriage.
Disclaimer
The content in this article is intended solely for emotional awareness, self-reflection, and general guidance. It should not be considered a substitute for professional mental health, medical, legal, or financial advice. Every individual’s situation is unique, and decisions should be made with the help of qualified professionals. The stories or letters published may be adapted or anonymized for privacy and educational purposes. If you are experiencing severe emotional distress, thoughts of self-harm, or crisis, please seek immediate help from a licensed professional or contact emergency services.
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