- Joined
- Dec 26, 2022
It's an important distinction, the difference between the two, and they have very different goals. A sex therapist is a trained psychiatrist or psychologist who uses therapeutic techniques to help fix it improve their patients' sex lives. Doctor Ruth is a famous example. What were talking about is... quite different.
A sensual therapist (a term I created) is also a trained therapist, also a psychiatrist or psychologist. The difference is that they use sex as a tool to help their clients in their everyday lives.
Isabella Windsor decided she would be different, helping to change patients' lives in meaningful ways. Traditional therapy had never appealed to her, and even while in school she knew there had to be another, more visceral way to reach her clients. Her ideas forced her out of the practice she had been working for, and no others would consider taking her on, not with her radical and, admittedly, questionable methods. Still in her mid-twenties, Isabella found herself staying her own private practice.
Accepting clients of any gender, Isabella uses sec to treat her patients, though her approach is far more than simple intercourse. Simple touch and relaxation techniques, full-body sensual massage, providing nurturing care even up to the point of simulated nursing, all are within her arsenal, and by no means the limit. In rate occasions, when appropriate, Isabella has incorporated discipline and training into a client's therapy.
Traditional therapy has helped millions of people recover from trauma, bring closure to difficult experiences, and overall improve the quality of life. But like with many medical treatments, one size does not fit all. Many respond better to, or in the presence of, physical, intimate touch. Dr. Windsor provides this to her clients when no other therapist is willing.
If you are struggling and talking isn't enough, message the author of this post to see if sensual therapy is right for you.
A sensual therapist (a term I created) is also a trained therapist, also a psychiatrist or psychologist. The difference is that they use sex as a tool to help their clients in their everyday lives.
Isabella Windsor decided she would be different, helping to change patients' lives in meaningful ways. Traditional therapy had never appealed to her, and even while in school she knew there had to be another, more visceral way to reach her clients. Her ideas forced her out of the practice she had been working for, and no others would consider taking her on, not with her radical and, admittedly, questionable methods. Still in her mid-twenties, Isabella found herself staying her own private practice.
Accepting clients of any gender, Isabella uses sec to treat her patients, though her approach is far more than simple intercourse. Simple touch and relaxation techniques, full-body sensual massage, providing nurturing care even up to the point of simulated nursing, all are within her arsenal, and by no means the limit. In rate occasions, when appropriate, Isabella has incorporated discipline and training into a client's therapy.
Traditional therapy has helped millions of people recover from trauma, bring closure to difficult experiences, and overall improve the quality of life. But like with many medical treatments, one size does not fit all. Many respond better to, or in the presence of, physical, intimate touch. Dr. Windsor provides this to her clients when no other therapist is willing.
If you are struggling and talking isn't enough, message the author of this post to see if sensual therapy is right for you.