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Sex Should Feel Good and Be Fun

40-50% of women report sexual dysfunction

What Determines Sexual Function?

  • Neurological
  • Hormonal
  • Vascular
  • Anatomic
  • Emotional
  • Energetic
  • Lifestyle

Why do I have Pain with Sex?

There are multiple reasons you might experience pain with sex.

Pain with sex can occur because adhesions prevent tissues from moving properly.

If the hormones are not balanced in your body, sex could be painful because of insufficient lubrication.

A history of sexual or pelvic trauma can also make sex scary and painful.

Inflammation and congestion can make sex painful.

There are so many reasons sex could be painful.

Dr. Caroline Peterson will help you figure out why you experience pain with sex, and together we will discover the solution.

Why Can’t I have an Orgasm?

There are multiple reasons a person might not experience orgasm because there are many places that the orgasm can originate in the bod, and many systems involved in producing the orgasm.

The emotional system is one of the most obvious contributors.

There are also neural pathways that carry signals from the brain to the end organ and back.

The pudendal nerve, pelvic nerve, hypogastric nerve, vagus nerve, and the intercostal nerve can all be involved.

The brain, the pelvis, and oxytocin can all be involved.

The energy body can be involved since it has a memory that stretches beyond the physical body.

Dr. Caroline Peterson will help you discover the systems involved and find the ways to help.

The Most Common Sexual Issues Reported by Women

#1 Libido and Desire

#2 Orgasm

#3 Arousal

#4 Painful Sex

What About Desire and Arousal?

Why is most of our emphasis placed on painful sex when women cite desire, arousal, and orgasm as more problematic?

I will guess it’s because pain seems to have an easier solution.

Desire, arousal, and orgasm have a lot to do with external factors in life like work, children, privacy, chronic health problems, depression or anxiety and the medications used to treat them, and being with someone you find attractive and attentive.

Neuroemotional technique (NET) is a great tool to help us discover the blocks to calling in a balanced, happy life and actually living it.

How Can Natural Medicine Help Me Enjoy My Sex Life More?

Dr. Caroline Peterson will combine manual therapy, pelvic floor therapy, adjusting, and craniosacral therapy to optimize the function of all the nerves, muscles, and structures involved with having sex.

She will also offer neuroemotional technique (NET) to support the emotional component of being sexual.

It is often important to address the chemical component of sex by discussing diet and doing lab work to evaluate for infections, inflammation, anemia (low energy), and other processes that could be undermining your sex life.