Sexual disorders are most often the result of a dysfunctional overlap between a person's will and his/her natural bodily response.
From this perspective we can understand that constant repeated thoughts focused around achieving a satisfactory sexual performance, or the fear of feeling pain and being contracted, will have disastrous effects on what should be a spontaneous and natural reaction.
This failure of experiencing a comfortable sexual relation will result in an exacerbation of the situation leading to a greater use of “will power” or to an avoidance and escape from sexual situations.
People usually try to solve their sexual problems by forcing themselves in to doing what they consider to be the correct behaviour.
But this attempt in the sexual realm, inevitably leads to the devastating paradoxical effect of aggravating even more the initial problem.
By understanding the underlying functioning of sexual pathologies, the brief strategic approach has been able to effectively block these dysfunctional attempts, hence, interrupting the vicious circle that end up nourishing the pathology itself.
This first intervention, apparently simple and minimal, frees the body's natural response from the influence of our own mind, provoking the spontaneous sexual reactions which our organism is programmed for.
This is why interventions are always built around the characteristics of the person's problem (from the attempted solutions carried out by the person and from existing exceptions) with the aid of specific intervention protocols devised to effectively introduce change in the dysfunctional pathology's functioning.
Brief Strategic psychology and psychotherapy have proven to be an effective and efficient solution for major sexual problems, including: