Refer with confidence.
Your client has done years of therapy, had real insight, real courage — and they still can't feel anything during sex.
You recognize this in the room.
- "I know my partner isn't doing anything wrong, but my body still shuts down."
- "I've worked through the trauma. I just still can't feel anything during sex."
- "I feel numb, checked out — like my body isn't mine."
- "Touch makes me anxious even when I want it."
- "I understand everything about why I'm this way. I just can't change how it feels."
What Sexological Bodywork® is.
Sexological Bodywork® is a trauma-informed, consent-based, and ethically scoped somatic modality that supports clients in reconnecting with their bodies, their genitals, their pleasure, their boundaries, and their somatic responses — all in service of healing, integration, and agency.
It's a professionally boundaried practice rooted in nervous system awareness, embodiment, and client-led exploration. The practitioner follows the client's pace and consent at every stage. The work is structured, held, and clearly scoped.
For clients whose pain lives in their bodies — whose insights haven't yet become sensations — this kind of somatic support offers something talk therapy alone cannot.
When a client is in therapy and doing this work alongside it, the results are often more integrated than either approach produces alone: therapeutic insights begin to land in the body, not just the mind.
Why haven't you heard more about this?
Because modern therapy is still catching up to something ancient, relational, and biologically true: safe, attuned, consensual touch regulates the nervous system, fosters attachment, and supports healing. This isn't fringe. It's well-established in attachment theory, polyvagal research, and trauma recovery literature.
And yet in mainstream psychotherapy, touch is almost entirely absent — not because it lacks therapeutic value, but because it was professionalized out of the field. Largely in response to historical abuses, risk management policies, and a cultural discomfort with embodiment — particularly sexual embodiment.
Sexological Bodywork is one bridge across that gap. A carefully held, scope-conscious practice for supporting embodiment, nervous system repair, sexual healing, and body-based trauma recovery. It's not surprising you haven't heard more about this. What's encouraging is how many clinicians are beginning to seek solutions they haven't tried before.
When therapists and bodyworkers collaborate, clients often experience:
These are not claims about outcomes. They're patterns that emerge when talk-based exploration and body-based integration are allowed to work together.
This work comes from a real interdisciplinary partnership.
Nicole and Jessica have been co-referring and consulting together for years. What's below isn't a theoretical framework — it's grounded in the actual tensions, questions, and breakthroughs that emerge when a licensed therapist and a certified sexological bodyworker try to serve the same client well.
Jessica Warner
MA, LPC-S · Licensed Professional Counselor · Dove + Wolf
Jessica is the founder of Dove & Wolf, a private practice devoted to trauma-informed, identity-affirming psychotherapy. She entered collaboration with somatic practitioners not from certainty, but from curiosity — and has been providing collaborative care with sex-positive bodyworkers since 2016. She brings the experience of navigating those early questions, the discomfort, and the shift that came from real, respectful partnership.
Nicole Siegel
CSB® · Certified Sexological Bodyworker® · Body Compass
Nicole is the founder of Body Compass, where she supports clients in reconnecting with their erotic selves through somatic practice, trauma-informed bodywork, and pleasure-centered healing. She offers free consultations specifically for therapists who want to understand the modality, ask honest questions, and determine whether it's an appropriate fit for their clients. No pressure. No sales pitch. Just a grounded, informed conversation.
Touch Points: A Guide to Sex-Positive Bodywork for Therapists
A printable PDF guide designed specifically for licensed mental health professionals. Written by Nicole and Jessica, it covers what sexological bodywork is, what it isn't, how to think about ethical collaboration, and how to assess whether it's an appropriate referral for your client.
What therapists often ask.
What actually happens in a session?
Sessions are one-on-one, fully clothed to start, and always client-led. The work may include somatic awareness practices, breathwork, guided body attention, and — when the client is ready and consenting — hands-on work with the body, including the genitals. Everything moves at the client's pace. Nothing happens without explicit, ongoing consent. Nicole works within a clearly defined scope and brings the same trauma-informed attunement you'd expect from any skilled somatic practitioner.
Is this safe for clients with trauma histories?
Yes — and in fact, many of Nicole's clients come with significant trauma histories. The work is explicitly trauma-informed: sessions are paced carefully, the client's nervous system responses are tracked throughout, and there is no pressure to move faster than the body is ready for. That said, the consultation is a good place to talk through your specific client's history so you can assess fit together.
How do I explain this to my client?
Carefully and without overpromising — which is exactly what the referral consultation is for. Nicole can help you find language that fits your client's history, readiness, and frame of reference. In general, something simple and honest tends to work well: that there's a practitioner who works somatically with sexual healing and embodiment, that the work is trauma-informed and consent-based, and that a free consultation with Nicole is available if they're curious.
Do I stay involved once I refer?
That's entirely up to you and your client. Some therapists maintain an open communication channel with Nicole — sharing relevant context, checking in on how the work is landing, and integrating what comes up in bodywork sessions back into the therapy room. Others prefer a clean referral with no overlap. Both work. Nicole is collaborative by orientation and happy to operate within whatever structure serves the client best.
What kinds of clients tend to benefit most?
Clients who have done significant talk-based work and feel stuck at the level of sensation or embodiment. Those experiencing low or absent desire, numbness or dissociation during sex, touch aversion, sexual shame that hasn't shifted through insight alone, or a persistent disconnect between what they understand and what they feel. Also clients navigating postpartum changes, gender and body identity, or the aftermath of sexual trauma that talk therapy hasn't fully integrated.
Is this within my scope as a therapist to recommend?
Referring out to a practitioner in a different modality is a normal part of ethical clinical care — no different in principle from referring to a somatic therapist, a physical therapist, or a psychiatrist. You're not endorsing or overseeing the work; you're expanding the care team. The consultation can help you feel confident in what you're recommending and why.
What if my client isn't sure they're ready?
Readiness doesn't have to be resolved before reaching out. Nicole offers a free intake conversation for prospective clients — a low-pressure space to ask questions, get a feel for the work, and decide without any obligation. Many clients find that the conversation itself helps them know whether this is the right next step.
I'm not a sex therapist. Is this still relevant to my practice?
Almost certainly yes. Sexuality, embodiment, and the relationship to touch show up across nearly every clinical presentation — trauma, chronic illness, relationship issues, body image, identity, postpartum experience, grief. You don't need to specialize in sex therapy to recognize when a client might benefit from support that works directly with the body.
Wondering if this is right
for your client?
Book a free consultation. Nicole will answer your questions honestly, help you think through fit, and if it's not right, say so directly.
Book a free consultation call