скачать книгу бесплатно
Sexual Performance Anxiety: 10 steps to beat it!
Larisa Pletneva
This book is about self-therapy methods of treating such a sexual disorder as the Sexual Performance Anxiety. The one is the most common reason for men to reach out to sexologists. The book presents self-help techniques to address anxiety, self-esteem and partner relationships, and the ones applied in couples sex therapy.
Sexual Performance Anxiety: 10 steps to beat it!
Larisa Pletneva
© Larisa Pletneva, 2024
ISBN 978-5-0064-0350-5
Created with Ridero smart publishing system
Preface
Thank you, dear Reader, for buying my book!
Attention: This text should not be considered a substitute for consulting a qualified medical professional. It is strongly recommended to consult a doctor before using a supplement.
My name is Larisa Pletneva, I am a psychologist majoring in sexology, Member of the Association of Sexologists of Russia.
My clients are Men suffering from sexual dysfunctions, such as sexual performance anxiety, premature ejaculation, delayed ejaculation, lack of sexual desire, and so on and so forth, as well as couples experiencing problems in their sexual life.
The idea to write a helpful book addressing such a touchy issue struck me a long time ago. I had a whole lot of failed sessions when clients were uneasy about coming. And I can understand their feelings —it is sometimes incredibly difficult to admit even to oneself that there’s a problem, much less to a stranger, though the one was a psychologist.
Sexual Performance Anxiety (SPA) has been known to the world for a good while: the SPA problem has been faced for as long as Homo sapiens has existed.
Surely, our ancestors lived in the Stone Age were not that concerned about satisfying their females, but failure to perform sexual duties was frowned upon even then.
Why do You need to read this book?
It presents the information I have collated for you from a variety of professional sources, including national masters of sexology, European experience and best practices, and personal observations based on therapy sessions given to clients.
The caveat here is that treating SPA assisted by a sexologist is dozens of times more effective than any self-therapy attempts, but if you are determined to try to overcome it by yourself, I will support you. Deciding to struggle is a major step toward getting rid of the problem.
In this book, I will tell you stories of some men struggling to cope with SPA, both successful and not quite happy ones. All the clients’ names and ages have been changed to make sure they cannot be identified and not to violate the sacred for any psychologist Code of Ethics.
After reading this book, you will learn how to influence your thoughts, control your anxiety, and manage your erection.
Don’t put it off and read it right away! Let me help you have sex back in your life!
Chapter 1. SPA as counterpart of erectile dysfunction
Amir, 34
He was one of my first clients and, I suppose, that is why he stuck in my mind.
He was an Oriental handsome guy with thick curly hair, well made and charismatic.
Having met him on the street, You, dear Reader, would never have thought that he could have any sexual problems. As he was Walking Sex. But no. He did have problems.
He was frantic with despair when he came to me, because his problem had to be solved urgently, literally by the end of that day.
By the way, men often wait until the last moment before reaching out for help, as there is no retreat indeed.
While being a long and happily married man, Amir fell in love like a teenager. The girl was young and sexually inexperienced. He thrilled when he talked about her, but…
The time came to have their first sex and… It was Total Fiasco: he had no erection WHATSOEVER. No matter how hard his new lover tried, no matter how he did, while burning with desire, nothing came of it.
All exhausted and put to shame, Amir came home to his all-too-familiar wife and… My God, he got aroused again, had 17-year-old boy’s erection and performed several sexual acts in a row, leaving his wife speechless.
* * *
And so, You, My Reader, have just got to see an absolutely typical pattern of SPA. Amir had no idea what it was; he had only once failed years before – and that only “because he had had a drink’. Apart from that, it had never happened to him before! He was Macho and He-Man after all!
Are you surprised, my Reader? Don’t be, who the choice will fall on doesn’t make any difference to SPA, whether that be a looker who is a fixture in parties or a modest stay-at-home scholar who freaks out when he sees girls on the street.
Anyone’s hard-on can be lost! And Every man has lost his erection before or during sex at least once in their lives!
If You, dear Reader, bought this book, it means you are experiencing inability to get or keep your erection.
I want to tell you that you are not alone, quite a number of celebrities and rulers suffered from this disorder.
The outdated “Impotence” will feature in the examples given here, but it is the very dreadful word that for a very long time was used to call any men’s failure.
The problem of impotence is first mentioned in the Old Testament. God punished King David for adultery and took away his “sword of David”.
In 1486, the Church published a treatise called The Hammer of Witches, which purported men’s potency problems to stem from nothing but witchcraft.
Middle Age men experiencing virility problems took that literally and launched witch-hunts.
There was a belief that a man could regain his erection by killing a witch.
In Rus’, they also went hammer and tongs in overcoming impotence, which was called “nevastanikha”, mainly with the aid of incantations and potions.
One of the ancient recipes has survived to our days,
“Should there be a man whose mikhir won’t get hard, then you take cervine marrow from bone, grind it in water and give it to that man to drink. Therewith the man’s mikhir will get hard.”
I do not recommend trying it, it is dangerous to health.
But Russian potions and incantations pale beside the impotence treatment methods prevailing in Europe at that time.
Electroshock therapy
In the second half of the 19th century, a whole lot of “men’s health” offices operated in Europe and the United States, where the main treatment device was an electric generator.
They applied electrodes to the penis or inserted them in the urethra and released an electric discharge hoping to “invigorate” the virile member.
Irradiation
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, pharmacies began selling pills that contained Radium, the element discovered by the Curies. At that time, no one was aware of the lethal effects of irradiation, and there were plenty of preparations that contained the trendy Radium, from potency cosmetic creams to ointments and rectal suppositories.
Transplantation of animal genitals
Frauds have always existed and, of course, they wouldn’t pass up such an opportunity as the impotence issue, as diseases can be monetized.
Thus, in the early 1900s America came to know Doctor Brinkley, who promised his patients that they would enjoy “iron-clad hard-ons’ after transplanting goat testicles into them.
There were lots of those wishing to do that, especially since Brinkley skillfully fueled the rush by spreading rumors about the first patient who had immediately became a father after the operation.
It did not last long, Brinkley was taken to court and spent all his money on lawyers.
So, which of the power holders combated with impotence and lost?
Dwight Eisenhower
The President of the United States was long and, supposedly, happily married.
But years later, information got out that his relationship with his secretary Kay had gone beyond the working one. Sex was a failure, and Dwight allegedly claimed after his nonperformance that he hadn’t thought about sex for many years and that he had failed because all his virility had been killed by his family life.
Rumor has it that he tried to treat the disease, but nothing helped. Perhaps it was too late.
Charles II of Spain
Charles ascended to the throne in 1665. His huge head and deformed lower jaw made him butt-ugly.
In addition to his ugliness, he was also very sick as he came of the Habsburgs where incest had been encouraged for generations.
Someone once said, “Charles I was a warrior and a king, Philip II was only a king, Philip III and Philip IV were only men, and Charles II was not even a man.” He suffered from fever, diarrhea, mental disability and erectile dysfunction. He did not trust any doctors and refused to take any treatment.
He died at 38, leaving no children to heir, while led to the years-long War of the Spanish Succession.
Peter III of Russia
The soon-to-be Empress Catherine waited in vain for her husband on their wedding night – he, being a drunkard, just got drunk and hit the sack.
Nor did Catherine know that Peter was unable to be her hundred-percent fulfilling husband because of phimosis (inability to retract the foreskin covering the head of the penis).
There is a speculation that Emperor Paul I was born to Catherine and her favorite Sergey Saltykov rather than her husband.
Henry IV of Castile, King of Castile and León
In vain did he pin hopes on the marriage to the Portuguese princess Joan, for his previous 13-year long one had been childless as the King’s wife had remained a virgin.
The Portuguese gave their Infanta to Henry only provided that a child be born, and should no conception occur, Joan would return home.
Henry hoped to make his potency good with the aid of some device invented by a University of Padua doctor, which was a golden tube that would help Henry’s seed get inside Joan. She did give birth to a child – a daughter who went down in history as Beltraneja, since her father was handsome Count Beltrán de Ledesma, the King’s favorite.
The civil war, which broke out as a result of the attempt to crown bastard Beltraneja queen, eventually enthroned Henry’s half-sister Isabella.
Christian VII of Denmark
In the 17th century, King Christian VII’s favorite pastime was masturbation.
The King’s self-gratification became a real state problem. Christian VII was mentally sick (according to some sources, he suffered from schizophrenia) and could masturbate for hours.
The government could not get their ruler to hike up his pants and turn his attention to the affairs of state.
At government meetings, which Christian did attend, he masturbated uncontrollably.
Henry VI of England
The modest King Henry VI took no interest in the intimate moments of life at all. In fact, he was impotent.
One day his faithful friends and members of the government decided to surprise him and sent some naked dancers to his room.
The King’s reaction was unexpected.
Henry VI ran out of the room appalled and shouting, “Ew! What a disgrace!”
When his wife Margaret of Anjou announced she was pregnant, the monarch nearly fainted. According to the court gossip, the Duke of Somerset conceived that child.
Erectile dysfunction is the man’s persistent or recurrent inability to get and/or keep an erection firm enough to have and complete successful sexual intercourse.
“Erectile dysfunction” is usually diagnosed when a man is unable to keep an erection in over 25% of the sexual intercourses he attempts to have. According to American researchers, more than 150 million men over 40 suffer from this disorder worldwide. But right now, the appointments with me are made mostly by men in their 30s.
Erectile dysfunction can be organic, psychogenic or mixed.
Sexual Performance Anxiety is a sexual phobic disorder, and it refers to psychogenic erectile dysfunctions. So, SPA is a phobia or neurosis.
Sure enough, SPA has existed since Homo sapiens evolved, but it was described and so named only in the 1980s.
Here are a few SPA definitions given by leading sex therapists:
– In Western literature, SPA is known as the “fear of sexual failure”. The main thing in this syndrome is the worries/fear of being unable to perform or failing to complete sexual intercourse. Such worries/fear manifest themselves to the utmost when and where sex is to happen, which, as a rule, impairs sexual functions due to deautomatization thereof.
– Anxiety neurosis, both as an independent disease and a syndrome in any other disorder, represents the most frequent reaction of a person to failed sexual intercourse. This primary dysfunction is based on the obsessive fear of failing sexual intercourse.
How does SPA manifest itself?
So, what happens when one has SPA? What symptoms serve as a red flag?
It is a “failure”, meaning the erection is weak, not firm enough for penetration, or the erection dies out during or before intercourse.
Simply put, the erection gets weaker as sex nears. Certain psychosomatic manifestations may be present too, which are hot flashes, palpitations, sweating, dizziness, pain in the lower abdomen or penile region.
Below is the portrait of SPA!