У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Vaginismus Therapy | Will Vaginismus Treatment Hurt? или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Vaginismus is characterized by painful or impossible vaginal penetrations, pain during sex, and pelvic pain. It can be caused by fear, anxiety, past trauma, and other factors. Vaginismus treatment doesn't hurt at all! Women who seek vaginismus therapy often have questions about vaginismus treatment, whether it is painful, about vaginismus cure, and other vaginismus advice. In this video, Dr. Katz discusses what is vaginismus, and talks about vaginismus therapy & treatment, the associated anxiety, and how vaginismus treatment feels: How painful is vaginismus therapy? Will vaginismus treatment hurt? How much will it hurt? Am I going to suffer? For how long after the session? Do I have to worry about my performance after the treatment session? Like. Comment. Subscribe. Let us know if you have any questions. Website - vaginismus treatment: https://www.womentc.com/conditions-an... Vaginismus Support Group: https://www.womentc.com/conditions-an... Email: [email protected] Office phone: +1.516.576.1118 Contact us online: https://www.womentc.com/contact/ _____________________________________________________________________________________ Today's topic is how painful is vaginismus treatment? A common question women have. We often hear this question from women who inquire about the treatment, whether they call in advance of booking an appointment or when they arrive at the treatment, or when they're on the treatment table before we start the treatment. And they say, "Will it hurt? How much will it hurt? How will the pain be? Am I going to suffer? Do I have to be on medication before the treatment? Do I have to worry about performance after the treatment?" It's a profound concern women have because the vagina has betrayed them, so they feel, and because they have tried to put things in the vagina to sort out the vaginismus and they could not, and it always was a painful experience, so women are very concerned about that. What is the truth? The truth is that the treatment in the hand of a qualified vaginismus clinician should not hurt. There may be some training sensations, what we call, some feelings of newness, of using the vagina, some discomfort here and there as you work your way through, but they should not be this devastating pain that will make one disabled for hours or incapacitated for half a day. Now let's remember, vaginismus is a psychosomatic condition. It is always an expression of anxiety. When the anxiety resides in the genitals, in the vagina, it clenches the vagina upon attempted penetration or even the thought of penetration. So the clinician who guides you through the program has to understand that psychosomatic aspect of it and has to navigate your anxiety together with the vaginal function in order to allow the vagina to open up, to allow the vagina to welcome the whatever item is gonna go into it for training and for overcoming the vaginismus will allow the patient to say, "Aha. If my head is in the right place, and if I can sort out my anxiety, my vagina could become rather friendly." And then of course there is no pain. Why should there be pain? The vagina is a natural body part. It should work automatically. It should work without discomfort, barring any other complications that vaginismus typically does not bring with it anyway. So to the question of, how painful should the treatment be? How painful will it be? What should they do about the pain? Our answer is, based on thousands of cases: Trust the process. Express your concern to your clinician. That's okay. They should know you're worried about that. Have them navigate you in the proper way through showing you that your vagina could be receiving penetrations. You can manage you anxiety. You can free up the vagina of the anxiety that causes that anticipatory closure. And then you'll see that it does not hurt at all. On the average, our patients either don't have any discomfort or have some training sensation, some mild discomforts of training, or they feel the area chattering for about 20 minutes after the treatment, just leftovers of the nerve ending saying, "Aha. I felt something different than before." And that's it. It's gone. It's done. A woman can go on to work, to a social life, to working out, to going to sleep, to whatever she needs to do. I hope you take your time. Sort out your resources. Find a clinician you feel comfortable with. Find a clinician who knows what to do and who knows how to navigate your vagina, your anxiety, and your vaginismus, so that your treatment will not be painful but rather successful, empowering, and enlightening.