I believe in providing sex counselling services with full-transparency, which includes my values and beliefs as a sex & relationship therapist so you can decide if we are a good fit. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me directly.
Autistic, ADHD, and AuDHD affirming sex therapy. I have been diagnosed with AuDHD, which means I have lived experience with Autistic traits, hyperactive traits, and inattentive traits. Most sex therapy training, workshops, books, and resources do not adequately cover how these traits can impact sexual health. While this is slowly changing, I aim to bring my lived experience, research, practice-based evidence to supporting you with your particular flavour of neurodivergence within the context of your sexuality.
Queer, Trans, and Intersex affirming sex therapy. I identify as a bisexual-queer intersex person, which means I have some lived experience with these identities, but mostly an appreciation for how queer, trans, and intersex identities and experiences vary across individuals. I value each unique person’s relationship to their 2SLGBTQIA+ identities. You are never too queer and you are always queer enough. You are valid and real.
Asexual and grey sexual are valid. I realize the A in the above acronym is meant to depict those who identify as asexual, but it deserves additional attention as it is often lost in conversations about 2SLGBTQIA+ identities. If you have no desire to have sex and/or no sexual attraction to others, never have, or rarely do and want to explore sexual health in the context of your reality, I will support you.
Mind, body, and spirit. Our sexuality is impacted by how our body functions, our thoughts and feelings about sex, including how we relate (or don’t relate) to others. But these three aspects of our health do not operate in isolation. How our body functions can impact how we feel about sex, and how we feel about sex can impact how our body functions. And how we think we are supposed to show-up as sexual beings in the world (the spiritual realm) will impact both our bodies and our minds. In the medical world, this is referred to the biopsychosocial model, meaning: health and wellness is determined by the interaction between our biology, psychology, and social supports.
Trauma-informed sex-positivity. Trauma-informed means I understand how trauma can impact our relationship to others and our own sexuality. Sex-positive means I appreciate that sex can be a healthy and even an integral part of a person’s overall wellness. Trauma-informed sex-positivity means I support you in cultivating whatever sexuality is meaningful and enriching for you. It also means that if what you enjoy to do sexually is partially informed by traumatic experiences (and is between consenting adults), I believe that it is valid and healthy, not pathological.
Sexuality exists across the life-cycle. I work with young adults, pregnant folks, parents, caregivers, people experiencing effects of aging and menopause. I recognize that people who experience sexual desire and/or attraction are born sexual beings and die sexual beings regardless of age or ability. Learning how to navigate the inevitability of changes on our sexual preferences, abilities, and body image is an integral part of sex therapy.
Sexuality and (dis)abilities. There is a pervasive myth that people with disabilities are either incapable of having sex or are not interested in having sex because they are disabled. Differing mental and physical abilities will absolutely impact how a person can engage with sex, when, or with whom, but if you experience sexual desire and/or attraction a disability does not mean you do not have a sexual self. You are as deserving of and entitled to sexual expression on your own terms as much as everyone else.
Drugs & alcohol are valid forms of self-care. Whether you are self-medicating with recreational drugs, marijuana, or alcohol, I believe that this form of self-care is valid and potentially very useful. I believe that drugs/alcohol can be paired with sex more or less safely and I am willing to explore these possibilities with you. I also understand that sometimes self-medicating can become a problem unto itself and that consent can be difficult or downright impossible on drugs/alcohol in some circumstances. While I do not have the training for all forms of substance use support, if you have a relationship to drugs or alcohol and want to discuss how this relates to your sexual health I am prepared to explore this with you.
Sex work is real work. Before and after briefly working in the industry, I have always believed sex work is real work. I have worked with sex workers who love their work, who don’t love their work (similar to many other people across most industries), who want to get out of the work, or whose opinion of sex work changes day-to-day. Whether it is your sex work that brings you to counselling or a completely unrelated issue but you don’t want to hide what you do for a living, I am prepared to meet you where you are at.
Kink & BDSM is not a pathology. Ongoing research and decades of community care have made it clear that consensual kink, power play, and/or pain play relationships can be healthy, safe, and empowering. If you are looking for counselling to help you ease into your kinkier side or just need someone who won’t pathologize your pleasure, I can support you.
Feminism is relevant and sexism hurts everyone. I am well-versed in how gender roles and stereotypes impact our sexual behaviour. Feminism, and specifically feminist theories that incorporate an understanding of intersectionality and trans rights, can help us understand power dynamics at work, within our families, or in our romantic and/or sexual relationships. I believe understanding how internalized ideas about gender roles influence our behaviour can be pivotal in helping all of us break free from oppressive relationships.
Anti-oppressive & anti-racist practices. As a settler, I believe in the importance of addressing internalized racism and white supremacist ideas due to the nature of living on colonized land built on the racist oppression of black and indigenous people. I have sought to understand how colonization has uniquely pathologized black and indigenous bodies and its impact on sexuality. However, I cannot know the lived experience of being BIPOC as a Euro-white settler so I have familiarized myself with different sexual health services should you feel the most appropriate course of action be a referral to a BIPOC care provider.
Global politics live in our intimate relationships. A core component of relationship therapy includes screening for abuse. Sex therapists do this because to hold all players equally accountable when there is an abuse of power is harmful to individuals and communities. So-called Canada is built on exploitive relationships of abuse for the benefit of a few, which are reflected in domestic homicide and violent relationships (see Insurgent Love). For this reason, I work to be in solidarity with marginalized communities across the globe and support black liberation from capitalist exploitation in Sudan and the Congo, the liberation of Palestine and Lebanon from Israeli occupation, migrant rights abroad including Lebanon, and the interconnection between these human rights issues and environmental justice.
