Sexual surrogate

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Sex surrogates, sometimes referred to as surrogate partners, are practitioners trained in addressing issues of intimacy and sexuality. A surrogate partner works in collaboration with a sex therapist to meet the goals of their client. This triadic model is used to dually support the client: the client engages in experiential exercises and builds a relationship with their surrogate partner while processing and integrating their experiences with their therapist or clinician.

The main organization devoted to sexual surrogacy in the United States is the International Professional Surrogates Association (IPSA). It has only a few dozen sexual surrogates practicing in the United States.[1] IPSA vets prospective surrogates, and there exist surrogates who claim to have IPSA certification who in fact do not. Since 1973, IPSA has not experienced any legal issues and has operated in the open.[2]

Overview

The modality in which surrogate partners work is called Surrogate Partner Therapy. This modality is used to address obstacles to physical and emotional intimacy that a client is unable to resolve through traditional therapy and requires the involvement of a partner. Clients’ presenting issues have commonly included sexual dysfunctions, lack of healthy intimate experiences, or traumatic history.

History

Masters and Johnson introduced the practice in their book Human Sexual Inadequacy, published in 1970. They believed that people could learn about sexual intimacy only by experiencing it. In their research, subjects that were partnered used these partners to aid in a series of exercises designed to help overcome sexual dysfunction. Unpartnered subjects were paired with "surrogates" who would take the place of a partner, work under the direction of a trained therapist, and act as a form of mentor for the client. In their research, all of the surrogates were women who were assigned to work with single men. Today, most surrogates are women, but a few are men.[3]

After Masters and Johnson published successful results of their sexual surrogacy practice, a number of outside therapists also took up the practice and a national association of surrogates was founded.[4] The practice of Surrogate Partner Therapy reached its peak in the early 1980s with a few hundred surrogate partners practicing in the U.S.[5] However, this same decade, most sex therapists began to stop working with sexual surrogates. Some surrogates had already chose to become both therapist and surrogate, which Masters himself deplored. Masters and Johnson stopped their own sexual surrogacy practice due to legal worries and the tendency of the surrogates to become emotionally involved with the wealthy patients.[4]

Since the 1980s, Surrogate Partner Therapy's popularity declined but reentered social consciousness after the 2012 film The Sessions, which depicts one surrogate partner's work with a disabled man. As of 2014, those practicing Surrogate Partner Therapy were still very few in number.[5]

According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, sexual surrogacy is paid for by Israel's Ministry of Defense for Israeli soldiers who are injured from war. This is for the purpose of sexual rehabilitation.[6] Sexual surrogates, in Tel Aviv for example, operate through a sex therapy clinic which started in the 1980s as a rehabilitation center on a religious kibbutz. Chief rabbis approved of the rehabilitation center and stated they would only allow the sexual surrogacy to operate in Tel Aviv under the condition that no married men or women can be surrogates.[6] In addition to servicing disabled soldiers, surrogates from this clinic also service patients with intimacy anxiety, established mental disorders, vaginal spasms, or erectile dysfunction.[7]

Typical problems

Patients frequently present with these specific problems:[8][9]

There are people who have experienced a change in sexual lifestyle due to an acquired disability (accident, paralysis, disease, trauma), and a surrogate can help them explore and develop sexual potential.[10] The causes of sexual concerns are numerous and the methods a surrogate might use to help improve a client's sexual life are varied.

The Process

The course of this therapy involves continued communication with both the therapist and the Surrogate Partner. The therapist is responsible for addressing the client's concerns and helping them explore ways to overcome their sexual problems through Talk Therapy. If the therapist and client deem it necessary that they need additional assistance, they can explore the option of working with a Sexual Surrogate Partner. Therapists are limited only to talk therapy, which is why a Surrogate Partner can be beneficial in helping address the client's concerns through exposure therapy, with no limitations of touch. The therapist is responsible for relaying critical information and treatment goals to the Surrogate Partner for the meeting with the client, so that they may fully address their concerns during the interaction. The therapist, surrogate partner, and client work together to create their course of a treatment plan, the interaction between the client and the Surrogate Partner is essentially for the client to practice what they've learned with their therapist through talk therapy.

The Four Phases of Sexual Surrogate Therapy

The methodology of this therapy is described to have four phases to achieve a successful treatment:

  1. Emotional connection
  2. Sensuality
  3. Sexuality
  4. Closure

The first step in Surrogate Partner Therapy is for the surrogate to verbally create an emotional connection and bond with the client, to create a safe environment and address any boundaries and expectations. During this step, the surrogate and client can get to know each other as individuals and create a meaningful relationship. This first step is essential in making the client feel comfortable in pursuing this new type of therapy and laying a good foundation for practicing emotional intimacy.

The next step involves exploring the client's sexuality, this step can involve physical touch and nudity to help the client overcome their sexual concerns, but would not involve sexual arousal or interaction between one another. In this step, the surrogate can work on exercises with the client to feel comfortable in their own body and next to someone else's body, this can involve hugging, or cuddling.

In the third step, the surrogate and client focus on sexuality, this can involve:

  • Oral-Genital Stimulation
  • Physical touch
  • Sexual arousal
  • Sexual contact
  • Sexual intercourse

The fourth step is closure, to close out the therapy once all parties are satisfied with the results.

Therapy

Since sexual problems are often psychological rather than physical, communication plays a key role in the therapeutic process between a patient and the surrogate partner, as well as between the surrogate partner and the therapist. Surrogate partners offer therapeutic exercises to help the patient. These may include, but are not limited to relaxation techniques, sensate focusing, communication, establishing healthy body image, teaching social skills, sex education, as well as sensual and some sexual touching. Surrogate partner therapy begins with a meeting between the client, therapist, and surrogate partner in which the goals of the client are discussed and the scope/duration of the therapy are established. Throughout the process, communication between surrogate partner-client, client-therapist, and surrogate partner-therapist is maintained.[11]

Some couples attend surrogate partner therapy sessions together, while some people (either single or in a couple) attend them alone.[12] The surrogate engages in education and often intimate physical contact and/or sexual activity with clients to achieve a therapeutic goal.[12] Some surrogates work at counseling centers, while others have their own offices.[13]

Articles

The 2003 Salon.com article "I was a middle-aged virgin", by Michael Castleman, discusses a middle-aged American virgin (Roger Andrews) and his therapy with the sex surrogate Vena Blanchard.[14]

Documentaries

Legality

Stuart Green, a professor law at Rutgers University, argues in his book Criminalizing Sex: a Unified Liberal Theory that there are no reported criminal cases involving the prosecution of voluntary, adult, therapeutic sexual surrogacy of the type that IPSA offers. However, Green identifies that the French National Ethics committee has uniquely decried IPSA-type sexual surrogacy as an immoral form of commercial sex trade.[16]

American legal scholar Sherry Colb argues that sexual surrogacy could occupy a similar legal position that legal medical marijauana is in relation to illegal marijuana use. In that, even if sexual surrogacy violated prostitution prima facie, its practitioners could be allowed a justification-type defense.[16]

In popular culture

  • In an episode of Anger Management, "Charlie and the Virgin" (2013), a friend of Kate (Selma Blair) is a 32-year-old virgin who is looking for her first-time sexual encounter with a man. Charlie Goodson (Charlie Sheen) decides to be her first encounter as a faux sex surrogate (not being professional or licensed), and she becomes attached to him.[17][circular reference] Later on she finds out that he (Charlie) was taking the place of a professional sex surrogate for a real one provided to her.
  • In Franklin & Bash (2011-2014): the character of Peter Bash's mother, played by Jane Seymour, is a sex surrogate.
  • In season 1 episode 10 of Backstrom (2015), "Love Is a Rose and You Better Not Pick It", the S.C.U. investigates when a young female sex surrogate is found dead.[18][user-generated source?]
  • In the episodes "Party Girl (Part 1)" and "Party Girl (Part 2)" of Season 9 of Night Court, both first aired in 1992, the character Dan works as a sex surrogate after meeting a woman (in Part 1) who is one.
  • In the Season 3 (2006) premiere of Boston Legal, titled, "Can't We All Get a Lung?," Aspergian attorney Jerry Espenson sees sexual surrogate Joanna Monroe (Jane Lynch) at his counsel and compadre Alan Shore's (James Spader) behest.[19]
  • Masters of Sex episodes 03-07 and 03-08, "Monkey Business" and "Surrogates" (both 2015) feature sexual surrogacy; the show is a TV series based on the work of Masters and Johnson.
  • My Therapist (1984), an American TV movie starring Marilyn Chambers, is about a sex surrogate. It was based on her one-woman show Sex Surrogate, which in 1979 caused controversy in Vegas as it featured full-frontal nudity, which was banned from all casinos.[20][21] In 1983, that one-woman show was spun off into a 26-part syndicated soap opera called Love Ya Florence Nightingale. It was broadcast on cable television channels such as the Playboy Channel.[22][23]
  • The American movie She's Lost Control (2014) is about the professional and personal life of a sexual surrogate.[24][user-generated source?]
  • The American movie The Sessions (2012) stars Helen Hunt as Cheryl, a sexual surrogate who helps polio survivor Mark (John Hawkes) lose his virginity at the age of 38, based on the true story of Mark O'Brien and Cheryl Cohen-Greene. O'Brien wrote about his experience in 1990.[25]
  • The Israeli movie Surrogate (2008) is about a female surrogate (Lana Ettinger) treating a man (Amir Wolf) who was sexually abused as a child. The film was directed by Tali Shalom-Ezer and is based on research at Dr. Ronit Aloni's clinic in Tel Aviv.

See also

References

  1. ^ UBELACKER, SHERYL. "From sex shops to coaching, services can help people with disabilities explore sensuality". The Globe and Mail. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  2. ^ Lawrenz, Lori. "Sex surrogate therapy: What is it and how does it work?". Medical News Today. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  3. ^ Freckelton, Ian (2013), "Sexual Surrogate Partner Therapy: Legal and Ethical Issues", Psychiatry, Psychology & Law, 20 (5): 643, doi:10.1080/13218719.2013.831725, S2CID 143089756
  4. ^ a b Gabbard, Glen (1989). Sexual Exploitation in Professional Relationships. American Psychiatric Press. p. 141. ISBN 9780880482905. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  5. ^ a b "Sexual Surrogacy Revised". Contemporary Sexuality. 41 (1). February 2014.
  6. ^ a b Marzouk, Phil. "How sex surrogates are helping injured Israeli soldiers". Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  7. ^ Tobin, Andrew. "An Israeli therapist is selling the healing power of sex with a stranger". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  8. ^ Zilbergeld, Bernie (1999). The New Male Sexuality. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 9780553380422.
  9. ^ Keesling, Barbara (2006). Sexual Healing. Alameda: Hunter House Inc.
  10. ^ Cohen Greene, Cheryl (2012). An Intimate Life. Berkeley: Soft Skull Press.
  11. ^ "Surrogate Partner Therapy". Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  12. ^ a b "Better-Sex Secrets from a Sex Surrogate | Women's Health Magazine". Womenshealthmag.com. 15 October 2012. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  13. ^ "Certified Sex Surrogate Partners". Sexsurrogateofla.com. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  14. ^ ""I was a middle-aged virgin"". 8 October 2003.
  15. ^ "Taboo: Forbidden Love". National Geographic Channel.
  16. ^ a b Green, Stuart (2020). Criminalizing Sex: A Unified Liberal Theory. Oxford University Press. p. 312. ISBN 9780197507483.
  17. ^ List of Anger Management episodes
  18. ^ "Love Is a Rose and You Better Not Pick It" – via www.imdb.com.
  19. ^ Listo, Mike (19 September 2006), Can't We All Get a Lung?, James Spader, Julie Bowen, Mark Valley, retrieved 27 February 2018
  20. ^ Rogers, John. "Adult film star Marilyn Chambers dies at 56; Las Vegas ties numerous". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  21. ^ "Mayor says actress should cover up". Anderson Daily Bulletin. Associated Press. 11 May 1979. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  22. ^ "Chambers doing TV series", Park City Daily News, 6 May 1983
  23. ^ "Heroes & Villains: a Postscript". people.com. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  24. ^ "She's Lost Control" – via www.imdb.com.
  25. ^ "On Seeing A Sex Surrogate - The Sun Magazine".

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