How Therapists' Sexual Issues Influence
Treatment
An enormous part of our culture, sexuality is a big part of our
lives. Not surprisingly, therapists have personal issues around
sexuality, issues that influence and sometimes even determine the
course of treatment. This workshop will explore many of those issues,
examine how they affect our work, and suggest a model for becoming
more comfortable and nonjudgmental about our clients' (and perhaps
our own) sexuality.
Some common therapists' sexual issues that will be covered
include:
- Basic mistrust of sexual energy
- Anger at men/women/sex
- Willingness to help clients define what's sexually
"normal"
- Discomfort/unwillingness to accept certain variations
- Desire to prove sexual liberalism or morality
- Fear of sexuality
- Misinformation about biology, psychology, sociology, &
anthropology of sexuality
- Over-identifying with a client or client's partner
We will also look at some of the ways therapists collude with
clients' disempowerment around sexuality:
- Not understanding how the media, church, and government
conspire to disempower people sexually
- Not confronting clients' beliefs about others' sex lives
- Not (appropriately) self-disclosing about sexual feelings
- Believing that sexual trauma dooms clients' sexuality
- Letting clients identify themselves primarily as sexual
victims
- Not confronting clients' self-diagnoses
- Getting caught up in the sexual content of what clients
say