Why Men Stop Trying in Marriage (and How to Get Him Back) | Feat. Pastor Julie Signorelli
Why do men shut down in marriage? What makes them stop pursuing, stop initiating, and start checking out emotionally, spiritually, or even physically?
In this final episode of the marriage series, Pastor Mike and Pastor Julie Signorelli unpack the real reasons men lose motivation in relationships—and what you can do to restore purpose, partnership, and passion in your home. This candid conversation goes beyond surface-level advice and gets to the heart of what men and women truly need to thrive.
Whether your marriage feels distant or you simply want to build a stronger bond, this episode gives you the tools, language, and perspective to grow together—not apart.
- What men actually need (hint: it’s not just respect)
- How purpose and partnership reignite a man’s heart
- Why emotional safety matters for both spouses
- Faithfulness beyond fidelity: guarding time, attention, and affection
- Practical ways to reestablish connection and shared rhythms
📲 Get equipped and go deeper at www.mikesignorelli.com
Mentioned in this episode:
Inherit Your Freedom
Are you ready to break free from the cycles of generational trauma, curses, and limitations that have held you and your family captive for years? I recently finished writing my second book - Inherit Your Freedom, a powerful guide to transforming your life and legacy. This is more than a book—it’s a blueprint for breakthrough. Through my personal journey of overcoming my own family’s generational struggles, you’ll gain practical wisdom and real-world tools to unearth the spiritual obstacles holding you back and embrace the life of freedom God has destined for you.
The Domino Revival Movie
The Domino Revival takes moviegoers on an extraordinary journey with Mike Signorelli and a group of revivalists during a pivotal period in our nation’s history. As society’s fascination with the supernatural intensifies, this film unveils the awe-inspiring power of Jesus Christ. Through compelling preaching, documented miracles, triumph over despair, and liberation from demons, The Domino Revival captures the essence of spiritual hunger and delivers a profound cinematic experience. STREAMING NOW!
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All right.
Speaker AWelcome to our living room in New York City.
Speaker AMy name is Mike Signorelli, and this is my beautiful wife, Julie.
Speaker AAnd we are in our fourth and final installation of what men and women really want.
Speaker BYou made it.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AYou made it.
Speaker ASo what men really want is purpose and partnership.
Speaker AThat's what we're going to be talking about.
Speaker AAnd what women really want is what?
Speaker AFaithfulness and commitment.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo women really want faithfulness.
Speaker AThey want commitment.
Speaker ABut men, they really need purpose and partners.
Speaker AOkay, so we're going to talk about that.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AOkay, we're going to just jump right in.
Speaker ASo men.
Speaker AMen, though, they need purpose.
Speaker AAnd one of the things about dating is that it.
Speaker ADating gives a man a sense of purpose because it's like the conquer thing, right?
Speaker AIt activates this.
Speaker BGotta get to know her, then you got a date her, then you gotta engage her, then you gotta.
Speaker BYeah, there's like, all these, like, levels.
Speaker BLike a video game.
Speaker AIt is.
Speaker AYeah, exactly.
Speaker BThe video gamific I knew I had.
Speaker BI had the men at video game, right?
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd that's.
Speaker AThat's a real phenomenon because it's like, oh, I think she likes me.
Speaker AWill she give me a chance?
Speaker ACan I kiss her?
Speaker ACan I hold her?
Speaker ACan I touch her?
Speaker AHow far can I take it?
Speaker ACan I marry her?
Speaker AAnd it goes in phases and stages.
Speaker AAnd a lot of guys, they shut down in the marriage because that part of them is no longer active.
Speaker ASo men need purpose.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker AAnd sometimes when a man feels like their purpose is dwindling or diminishing or gone, they're like, you what?
Speaker AWhat does it really matter?
Speaker AShe's never happy, you know, nothing I do.
Speaker AAnd what they'll do is they'll shift their focus to an alternative purpose.
Speaker AAnd that's why, you see, men, they start getting into hobbies.
Speaker AOh, I got to re.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI'm actually working on a car, you know, like.
Speaker ABecause what happens is they're so wired for purpose that if they feel like, well, listen, my previous purpose was this relationship, but now it feels purposeless.
Speaker AI'm just going to move on, and I'll reallocate this energy towards other purposes.
Speaker BMakes a lot of sense because men have a lot of hobby groups, you.
Speaker AKnow, like, no, there's nothing wrong with the hobby, but, like.
Speaker BNo, no, no.
Speaker BI know what you're saying.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BIt's just, like, innate in you.
Speaker AIt is.
Speaker ABut here's the question.
Speaker AIs it a hobby or is it misdirected purpose?
Speaker AWell, let me.
Speaker ALet me say this.
Speaker ADid the hobby Replace your, your relationship.
Speaker ALike, because every man, I believe, needs one or more hobbies.
Speaker BOh, yeah, I think they're very important.
Speaker BYes, yes.
Speaker AYou know, it's like, I got a lot of hobbies, actually.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut it's, it's healthy in the fact that it doesn't replace purpose.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AAnd so a lot of men struggle for, for that.
Speaker ABut then women, they need faithfulness.
Speaker AAnd so sometimes what I just try to do is try to make the distinction between purpose and faithfulness.
Speaker ABecause sometimes in a man's attempt to find, he becomes unfaithful because it's like I switch.
Speaker ANow I'm going to go here because I feel like, what does it matter anyway, you know, this relationship?
Speaker AOr they get comfortable and they're like, yeah, you know what?
Speaker ALike, I don't need to advance this marriage.
Speaker ALike, I'm on cruise control, so I'm going to go find purpose.
Speaker ASo a man can become unfaithful in his attempt to find purpose in the wrong place.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd then.
Speaker ABut a woman really needs faithfulness.
Speaker ASo, And I.
Speaker AExplain it to me.
Speaker BWell, I mean, I think women and, and I know this isn't the case for all women because somebody in the chat's gonna say, what about blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker BBut I would say most women who are not, you know, who.
Speaker BThere isn't something wrong with them are wired for commitment.
Speaker BLike, we are hardwired.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker BWhen we have babies.
Speaker BThat's why it's, it's so instinctual.
Speaker BIt's so instinctual.
Speaker BAnd that's why there's something like, there's a red flag when a mother doesn't have the connection with their baby, because that's what's like usual, natural.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd so when it comes to, I, I know that there are people out there that, not biblical, that believe, like, you know, that they don't have to have monogamy.
Speaker BThey're not wired for that.
Speaker BWell, guess what?
Speaker BYou are wired for that.
Speaker BThat is.
Speaker BEven science will tell you that, that the most fulfilled relationships are monogamous heterosexual couples who are committed to each other.
Speaker BSo we are hardwired.
Speaker BHardwired for it at a biological level.
Speaker BWe just are.
Speaker BAnd scripturally, we are taught, you know, when you're a woman coming up in the faith, and for those of you who didn't grow up in church, you know, like, I don't know, but like, as a woman growing up in the faith, in the church, you know, you're taught, you get married and you live your whole life with this person.
Speaker BAnd so that is like, in my subconscious.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo when it comes to commitment, I used to get so offended when I felt like things were like vying for your.
Speaker BFor your commitment, like your time.
Speaker BLike you had a, you know, a band.
Speaker BAnd how much time was he spending?
Speaker BBecause I want you to be committed to me and nothing else, you know, that's the unhealthy, toxic part of me, you know?
Speaker AYou're admitting that?
Speaker BI'm admitting it.
Speaker BI remember when you were with your band.
Speaker BIf I felt like band, we had a detached garage at the time.
Speaker BAnd if I felt like band rehearsal was going too long.
Speaker BDo you remember me doing this?
Speaker BThere was a power switch in the house and I would just shut the power off to the garage.
Speaker AYeah, that's a little toxic.
Speaker BNo, that was very toxic.
Speaker BGranted, you had your own toxic tendencies, but my.
Speaker BI felt like if there was anything that was threatening our commitment, that I just wanted to chop it off.
Speaker BWhether it was healthy, unhealthy, doesn't matter.
Speaker BNot every man is addicted to video games.
Speaker BSo some women, every time they pick up, you know, a video game controller, they're just going crazy.
Speaker BWell, okay.
Speaker BIs it the fact that they're doing something other than you, or are you, you know, jealous?
Speaker BThere's a lot to be determined.
Speaker BSo I think when it comes to commitment, if we feel like.
Speaker BBecause I think the obvious thing is fidelity, like, obviously we want you to be committed, but the more non obvious thing are the things that vie for your time commitment.
Speaker BYeah, I don't know if that.
Speaker BDoes that make sense?
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker ABecause it's like you.
Speaker AIf you feel.
Speaker AWhat you're saying is that sometimes women, if they feel like anything is to the detriment of that faithfulness.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ASo sometimes they can't, in their own mind, they can't make amends of, like, in other words, like, they.
Speaker AYou can't put it all together and say, it's possible that he still loves me and he's faithful to me, but he also has these other things in his life.
Speaker AYou're right.
Speaker AI mean, there are some unhealthy marriages where they only have each other.
Speaker ANo, you know what I mean?
Speaker BLike, and that's not healthy either.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABecause I think that there's something to be said about, like, having a separate life actually makes the together time more healthy.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ASo it's like, it's beneficial for me to go do this and explore this and see this.
Speaker AThen when we do come together, there's some.
Speaker AThere's it's exciting you know, because there are some couples that.
Speaker AIt's like they actually lose their individuality, but for the sake of the marriage, when I think that faithfulness doesn't necessarily mean, like, exclusivity in terms of my time, you know, because there's some people that they become one dimensional.
Speaker AAnd it's like, you go to work, you come home, go to sleep, go to work, come home, go to sleep.
Speaker AAnd then ironically, the.
Speaker AA man that does that can become less attractive to a woman.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ABecause they.
Speaker AIt's like they've lost their edge.
Speaker AAnd so it's like, I think there's a dynamic to this where a healthy man is not like always home.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ALike, it's like, are you going to the gym?
Speaker ADo you go golf?
Speaker ADo you have male friends where occasionally you go out shooting with them?
Speaker AYou know, doing different.
Speaker ALike, is there something about you?
Speaker BAnd like, obviously you can spend too much time on those things.
Speaker BLike, we're talking about healthy, like rhythms of rest.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ALike Ecclesiastes 3.
Speaker AThere's a time for everything.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ANow, there's been seasons where I think I went too far.
Speaker BLike, absolutely.
Speaker AIn the band thing where it was like I obsessed over the music and I just wanted to be an artist.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABut then there's also been times where I've gone too far into work.
Speaker AAnd this is like a more recent.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker AWhich we're.
Speaker AWe're in a Sabbath year right now where we're like peeling back.
Speaker AI got my travel down to the minimums.
Speaker AYou know, we're.
Speaker AWe're in a.
Speaker AWe're trying to work that out because.
Speaker AAnd I like that you were.
Speaker AYou used the word rhythm, not season or, you know, because it's like a healthy rhythm.
Speaker ALike six days of work, one day of Sabbath.
Speaker AThat's how God demonstrated was more work than Sabbath.
Speaker ASome people have six days of rest, one day of work.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ALike, if you added it all up and maybe that convicted somebody.
Speaker ANow, for me, what's funny is you were toxic.
Speaker AYou did shut off the garage.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker ABut then I counterbalanced the other direction and I hit a stretch of building for our family, building legacy to where how I knew I was getting unbalanced is like, you would come home with a hockey stick for me, you know, like you were trying to jump start my hobby.
Speaker BRollerblades, like, whatever I could get.
Speaker ALike your golf clubs.
Speaker BLike, let's do this.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd that was actually assigned to me, you know, that, like, you know, hey, I just bought you a fishing pole.
Speaker ALike, please do something other than work.
Speaker BIt was funny because in 2024, it was the year of people giving you gifts, hoping you would get a hobby, which is fun.
Speaker BYou have hobbies, you have music, you have different things that you would do.
Speaker BPoetry.
Speaker BThere's a lot of things that are hobbies that people don't see.
Speaker BSo, you know, and non traditional hobbies, like art and different things that, you know, you're.
Speaker BYou're, if you will.
Speaker BBut it was funny because, like, last year, someone gifted you a PlayStation.
Speaker BSomeone gifted you or whatever.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BI don't know which.
Speaker AI've played that thing a dozen times in the last year.
Speaker ABut every time I do, it's literally like once or twice a month.
Speaker AI literally go, man, I feel.
Speaker AI feel better.
Speaker AThat was cool.
Speaker BAnd I like.
Speaker BAnd it makes me so happy seeing you do it, but that's how it should be.
Speaker BYou know, if your wife is like, oh, my gosh, he's playing video games again, it's like, you might want to examine your commitment to her.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou know, you might want to examine, like, if things are imbalance versus, like, you know, every time you pick up a controller, our kids are like, yay.
Speaker AHe'S doing something funny, normal.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThey celebrate it.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BAnd we do it more, do it every day.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, we.
Speaker BWe got you golf clubs and we're like, putting it on your calendar to make you do it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo it's like you don't want to be.
Speaker BI think you've had seasons being too far in each direction, but, you know, when you were in too far in the direction of spending too much time, if I felt like our commitment to each other was threatened, like, it felt like in either way, that hobby was in either way.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause you could be right.
Speaker AOr your hobby can both threaten your faithfulness.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BYes, definitely.
Speaker BSo I don't know.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANow that's a really.
Speaker AThat's a really good point.
Speaker AAnd I think for men.
Speaker AWell, men, they need purpose and partnership.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker ASo I remember going back to the time where, you know, I was making music all.
Speaker AAll day and night.
Speaker AI felt like I needed partnership.
Speaker ALike, I would want you to come to the shows and you would never want to go.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, but I'm playing the biggest venues in Chicago and, you know, and.
Speaker AAnd sometimes that would put resentment in my heart because, you know, you know, it was like, well, all these other people are.
Speaker AAre coming, and my own wife, you know, doesn't want to come.
Speaker ASo men need partnership.
Speaker AAnd then even with the ministry, it's like, you know, there's times where, you know, I'm like, man, I need my wife to rock with me.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AIt's like, I need a partner.
Speaker AAnd so I think one of the things I would encourage the women to do is think of yourself like the w.
Speaker AYou're thinking about how I could be faithful.
Speaker ABut you.
Speaker ABut you should also be thinking about how you can be a partner.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo, like, if your man fishes, can you fish with him?
Speaker AIf your man golfs, can you go like, you always want to ride.
Speaker AYou want to drive the car?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AYou know, but you only can do, like, nine holes.
Speaker AYou can't do eight.
Speaker BI can only do four.
Speaker AYeah, because of your attention span.
Speaker BAnd you're like, okay, I'm gonna be on my phone.
Speaker BI want to eat the snacks.
Speaker BI'm done.
Speaker ABut it's like, can you be a partner?
Speaker ABecause I think a lot of men, deep down inside, if they were being honest, they view their wife as, like, this, as a partner and, like, you know, an accessory.
Speaker ALike, this is my.
Speaker AYou know, she's here with me.
Speaker ALike, she's on my arm, and we're going through life together.
Speaker AAnd then when it feels like they're an.
Speaker AAn enemy or an opposition versus a partner, that's where there's.
Speaker AYou know, so it's like, enter his world, even if it's not your world.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, and I think that that, to me, is something that would encourage, like, the women, like, think about his hobby and act like you care about it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AAnd that'll blow his mind.
Speaker BWell, it's like, what do friends do when you're friends?
Speaker BYou like, my friend.
Speaker BI want to go shopping.
Speaker BI want to go to lunch.
Speaker BI want to go to brunch.
Speaker BWe like the same things.
Speaker BWe do the same things together.
Speaker BThat's part of the bonding.
Speaker BBut when it comes to our spouse, it's like, oh, yeah, you're going hunting.
Speaker BGood luck.
Speaker BLike, no.
Speaker BWhat if you got the fatigues on?
Speaker BI don't know what hunting language is.
Speaker BI live in New York City.
Speaker BI have no idea.
Speaker BBut what are camo.
Speaker BYou get.
Speaker BYou get the.
Speaker AOn.
Speaker APut your.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd just sit there and go.
Speaker BGo for it.
Speaker BBecause you would do that for your friends, you know, how much more your spouse.
Speaker BAnd then I think a lot about, like.
Speaker BBut we partner and work together.
Speaker BI don't look at it as your career.
Speaker BYou know, I look at it as.
Speaker BThis is what.
Speaker BWhat.
Speaker BWhat Helps our family.
Speaker BAnd so I'm all in.
Speaker BSo, like, for example, today you had an appointment and we had a guest coming.
Speaker BAnd so instead of just letting you feel the full weight of it, I jumped in and was like, we're doing this.
Speaker BAnd we were cleaning the yard, we were getting the house ready, we were ordering food.
Speaker BAnd it was like, yeah, it was your thing.
Speaker BIt was your commitment.
Speaker BBut because we're a family, I was, like, partnered with you in that.
Speaker BAnd you didn't feel alone when you came home.
Speaker BEverything was ready.
Speaker BGo.
Speaker BWe were ready to rock.
Speaker BAnd so that's what we did.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker BSo we partnered.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd here's what I want to, like, close on just to encourage everybody.
Speaker ASo I.
Speaker AI really believe that what marriage is is two people trying to out serve each other.
Speaker ASo, like, I'm.
Speaker AI'm trying to out serve you.
Speaker AYou're trying to out serve me.
Speaker ALike, to be honest with you, I don't care about nails, but I've gone to the nail salon with you, and I am their favorite.
Speaker BYeah, they love you.
Speaker AI tip them really well.
Speaker AAnd, you know, they're trying to massage my neck and all this weird stuff because they're like, we love this guy.
Speaker AAnd but.
Speaker ABut the thing is, like, that's your world.
Speaker AMatter of fact, I feel awkward.
Speaker BYou are very.
Speaker BIn fact, they like, like, at the nail salon, they try to give you this, like, 22nd, like, massage at the end, like.
Speaker BAnd you are so uncomfortable.
Speaker BYou're like, please don't.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AOr the times that I've gone to you, gone with you to, you know, the.
Speaker AThe shopping, little, you know, and you know, I hate it, but I'm entering your.
Speaker AAnd there's something about that.
Speaker ALike, I'm entering your space.
Speaker AI'm entering your world.
Speaker AI'm caring about what you care about.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, as we come to a close, I.
Speaker AMy prayer is that as we.
Speaker AWe have bared our souls, we've laughed hysterically, we've cried, we've told you some of our weirdest stories.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker ADon't let your men.
Speaker AMen, do not let your pursuit of purpose cause you to become unfaithful.
Speaker AAnd then women, don't let your need for faithfulness actually cause you to not be a partner.
Speaker BCome on.
Speaker BYou said that.
Speaker BGood.
Speaker AI'm just trying to help y' all.
Speaker BYou said that, too.
Speaker BGood.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BNo notes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ACome on.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AWell, we're living the nose.
Speaker BWe're living it.
Speaker AAnd I think sometimes we put so much emphasis on these cleverly crafted Sermonettes and all this stuff.
Speaker AAnd there's a place for that.
Speaker AI mean, I prepare.
Speaker AI spend about 20 or 30 hours a week on the sermons that I preach on Sunday because there's thousands of people that need that fresh manna.
Speaker AThey need the meat of the word.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AI take that very seriously.
Speaker AAnd that's why millions of people cumulatively listen to the sermons on Sunday, and we feast on it all week across all of our locations.
Speaker AAnd, you know, but for this format, I felt like the greatest value we could bring is, like, if you were able.
Speaker AAnd a lot of times it's like, oh, I wish that you could help us.
Speaker AYou know, we get that mess by the hundreds.
Speaker AIn my inbox, my ministry inbox, it's literally couples.
Speaker AIf you could just have one meeting with my husband, one meeting with me.
Speaker AAnd so I was like, let's do four.
Speaker BLet's do four.
Speaker AYou're invited to my living room.
Speaker BThis is all the stuff we would literally say.
Speaker AThis is what we would say.
Speaker AWe wouldn't have a.
Speaker AAnd that's why we did this.
Speaker AAnd we'll keep going.
Speaker AMarriage refreshers, all that.
Speaker ASo thank you for letting me be your husband.
Speaker BThanks for being married to me.
Speaker BThanks for staying with me through the toxic era.
Speaker AYou were my first subscriber I was ever.
Speaker AAnd thank you for, well, sort of letting me learn and figure it out in front of you.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd to everybody watching right now, you know, thank you for letting us figure this out.
Speaker AI mean, we're.
Speaker AWe're far from perfect, but we're.
Speaker AWe haven't.
Speaker BWe're trying.
Speaker BWe're trying.
Speaker AI mean, love God, love your spouse, you know, preach average.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ABecause when you try to preach real extra, you end up in heresies.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ASo preach average, preach the word of God, and never give up.
Speaker AAnd those are the hardest things to do.
Speaker AThere's many people who stay loving their spouse but stop loving God.
Speaker AThere's many people who love God, love their spouse, but then they get off into these wild heresies where they.
Speaker ABecause of the itching of their ears, they crave.
Speaker AHow weird can we get?
Speaker BI'm good with preaching average.
Speaker BIt's like, hey, man, can you just.
Speaker AFeast on the word every day and.
Speaker AAnd not get such an exotic diet that you end up on heresies?
Speaker AAnd then.
Speaker AOr the last.
Speaker AThere's many people love God, love their wife.
Speaker AThey stay faithful to the scriptures, but then they give up.
Speaker AAnd so it's like my impartation to every single one of you watching right now is those four things.
Speaker AThere's four episodes, and there's four things that we want to impart in you.
Speaker ALove God, love your spouse, love the word of God, and never give up.
Speaker ASo I want to want to pray over each and every one of you right now.
Speaker APrayer of reconciliation and healing and restoration.
Speaker AFather, I pray right now for each and every one watching, Lord, that you would divinely and sovereignly heal them.
Speaker AGod, I believe in the.
Speaker AI don't believe in coincidences.
Speaker AI believe in divine confirmations.
Speaker AAnd the stories that were told, the lessons that were learned were all divinely deposited into the legacy of their family.
Speaker AAnd I pray that children and grandchildren and great, great grandchildren are all going to be connected to their yes.
Speaker AAnd Father, I thank you that what you put together, let no man separate.
Speaker AFather, I pray for the unity in their marriage.
Speaker AAnd I thank you, Lord, that as they continue to grow together, Lord, that you will refresh those who refreshed each other.
Speaker AAnd Father, we thank you.
Speaker AIn Jesus name, amen.
Speaker AAll right, y' all, that's it.
Speaker AThat's a wrap.
Speaker AWe'll see you in the next one.