A focused, high-level consultation designed to provide immediate clarity on sexual, emotional, and relational concerns through an integrated medical and psychological perspective. This session combines clinical understanding with Gestalt psychotherapy principles to explore both the physiological and emotional dimensions of sexuality.
The goal is to help you understand what is happening beneath the surface, reduce uncertainty, and gain practical direction for your next steps.
🧭 The Framework
1. Integrating the Clinical Foundation: Bridging Medicine and Psychology
In sexological work, the body is never only symbolic—it is a biological reality. As a physician, I recognize that sexual dysfunction or dissatisfaction is often linked to underlying physiological factors that must be considered.
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Identifying Somatic Markers: Even within a single consultation, attention is given to identifying or ruling out medical contributors such as hormonal imbalances, vascular conditions, or medication side effects (e.g., antidepressants, antihypertensives).
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The Mind–Body Loop: We examine how physical symptoms—such as erectile dysfunction or dyspareunia—can generate cycles of anxiety and emotional tension. By first addressing potential medical elements, we reduce psychological “threat activation,” creating a safer internal state for deeper psychological exploration.
2. Sexuality as Communication: Beyond the “Joy of the Senses”
While the sensory dimension of sexuality is important, Gestalt therapy understands sexuality as a deeper form of relational contact—a language expressed between individuals or within the self.
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The Relational Field: We explore what is being communicated through sexual interaction. Is it an expression of connection, control, emotional need, withdrawal, or validation-seeking?
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Depth of Expression: We move beyond sexual mechanics to explore underlying psychological dynamics. Sexuality often reflects the overall health of the relationship. When communication improves, sexuality shifts from physical discharge to a meaningful exchange of presence, vulnerability, and connection.
3. Shifting the “Sexual Posture”: Breaking Cycles of Monotony
A key outcome of a single consultation is the reframing of one’s sexual stance. Many individuals experience a “fixed gestalt”—a repetitive, automatic way of relating that becomes emotionally and sexually stagnant.
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Challenging Habituation: Routine can reduce desire. When intimacy becomes predictable or mechanical, the novelty that supports attraction and arousal diminishes. This work helps identify automatic behavioural patterns that limit authentic connection.
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Awakening the Dormant Self: By shifting posture—not only physically but also emotionally and attitudinally—curiosity and presence can be reintroduced into intimacy. This supports stepping out of rigid roles (such as “performer” or “ideal partner”) and returning to authentic engagement.
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The Power of Perspective: The focus is redirected from outcomes (performance, orgasm) to the lived process of relating. This shift helps restore a more natural, present, and emotionally connected sexuality, often diminished by stress or repetition.
Summary of Outcomes
| Objective | Focus Area | Desired Result |
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| Medical Screening | Physical Health | Identification of physiological factors and improved health clarity |
| Psychological Depth | Communication | Shift from “doing sex” to embodied, connected presence |
| New Perspectives | Relational Creativity | Breaking habitual patterns and restoring novelty and awareness |
Note
In the Gestalt tradition, awareness itself is considered therapeutic. By bringing conscious attention to these three dimensions, the consultation transforms what is experienced as a “problem” into an opportunity for insight, growth, and renewed vitality.