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What Is Sex Therapy? What Actually Happens in a Session

Dr. Tom Murray, PhD, LMFT, CST June 23, 2026 7 min read

If you have ever wondered whether to see a sex therapist but pictured something awkward, clinical, or worse, you are not alone. The single most common thing people say in a first session is, "I almost didn't come because I didn't know what this was." So let's clear that up. Sex therapy is one of the most ordinary, talk-based forms of therapy there is, and it helps with concerns far more people share than ever admit.

What sex therapy actually is

Sex therapy is talk therapy focused on sexual and intimate concerns. You sit fully clothed in a private office or video call and talk with a licensed therapist who has specialized training in sexuality. There is never nudity, physical examination, or any sexual contact. The work happens through conversation, education, and private exercises you do at home.

That last point is worth repeating, because the myth keeps people away from help they need: a sex therapist does not watch, touch, or demonstrate anything. The session looks exactly like any other therapy session. What's different is the focus and the comfort level. A trained sex therapist talks about bodies, desire, arousal, and intimacy the same way a physical therapist talks about a knee, with clinical ease and zero judgment.

Sex therapy draws on the same evidence-based methods as the rest of psychotherapy, including cognitive and behavioral techniques, emotionally focused approaches, mindfulness, and communication coaching. It simply applies them to a domain most general therapists are not specifically trained to address.

What happens in a session

A typical first session is a conversation about your history and your goals. The therapist asks what brought you in, how long it has been a concern, and what you want to change. From there you build a plan together. Later sessions mix talking through what's happening with concrete skills and at-home practices you do privately, between visits.

Here is what a course of sex therapy usually moves through:

  • Assessment. The therapist gathers your relationship, medical, and sexual history to understand what's contributing. Sometimes a referral to a physician rules out a physical cause.
  • Education. A surprising amount of distress comes from myths and missing information about how desire and arousal actually work. Naming this often brings immediate relief.
  • Skills and exercises. You may be given structured at-home practices, like sensate focus, communication scripts, or anxiety-reduction techniques. These are always done privately, never in the office.
  • Integration. Over time, the conversations and the practice change the pattern, whether that's reduced anxiety, restored desire, or a couple finally talking openly.

A note on privacy: Everything you discuss is confidential, and you set the pace. Nothing is required of you that you are not ready for. A good sex therapist follows your lead, never the other way around.

Who sex therapy is for

Sex therapy helps individuals and couples of any age, orientation, or relationship structure. You do not need to be in crisis, and you do not need a diagnosis. If a sexual concern is causing you distress or distance, that is reason enough to come in.

People often assume sex therapy is only for couples in trouble. In reality, the room includes single people working on anxiety or shame, long-married partners navigating a desire mismatch, people healing after medical changes or trauma, and couples who are doing fine but want a richer intimate life. Our therapists work with all of these.

You also do not need both partners present. Many people start individually. If you are partnered and your partner is hesitant, beginning on your own is completely valid and often shifts the dynamic at home on its own.

Concerns it commonly treats

Sex therapy addresses low or mismatched desire, difficulty with arousal or orgasm, erectile concerns, pain during sex, performance anxiety, the aftermath of betrayal, and the slow fade of intimacy that creeps into long relationships. Most of these respond well to focused, specialized work.

Among the most frequent reasons people reach out:

  • Desire discrepancy, where one partner wants more sex than the other, which is one of the single most common couple concerns.
  • Erectile concerns and the anxiety loop that often keeps them going long after any physical cause is resolved.
  • Pain or difficulty with arousal and orgasm, which often have treatable physical and psychological components.
  • Rebuilding intimacy after an affair, a medical event, childbirth, or simply years of drift.

If any of these sound familiar, you may find our companion piece useful: When Desire Fades: How Sex Therapy Helps Couples Reconnect.

Why a certified sex therapist matters

A certified sex therapist (CST) is a licensed clinician who has completed advanced, supervised training in human sexuality, usually credentialed by AASECT. Any therapist can say they "work with intimacy," but certification signals the specialized expertise these concerns actually require.

Sexuality sits at the intersection of biology, psychology, relationship dynamics, and culture. Treating it well takes training that most graduate programs barely touch. That's why the American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) certification exists, and why it's worth asking about when you choose a provider. At A Path to Wellness, our sex therapy is led by AASECT-certified clinicians, including practice owner Dr. Tom Murray.

How to know it's time to start

If a sexual concern keeps coming up in your mind, creates distance with a partner, or makes you avoid intimacy altogether, it is time to talk to someone. You do not have to wait until it becomes a bigger problem. Most people leave their first session relieved they finally said it out loud.

Sexual health is health. It affects mood, self-worth, and the closeness of your most important relationship. The hardest part is almost always the decision to reach out, and once that's done, the work itself is far gentler and more ordinary than people expect.

If you're in the Greensboro area or anywhere in North Carolina, our team offers in-person and virtual sex therapy in a setting built for exactly this conversation.

Frequently asked questions

Is there any nudity or physical touching in sex therapy?

No. Sex therapy is talk therapy. There is never nudity, physical exams, or sexual contact of any kind during a session. You stay fully clothed and the work happens through conversation, education, and at-home exercises you do privately.

Do both partners have to attend?

Not necessarily. Sex therapy works for individuals and for couples. Many concerns are best addressed together, but plenty of people start solo to work on desire, anxiety, shame, or a specific dysfunction.

What does "certified sex therapist" mean?

A certified sex therapist (CST) is a licensed mental health clinician who has completed advanced training and supervision in human sexuality, typically credentialed by AASECT. It signals specialized expertise beyond a general therapy license.

How long does sex therapy take to work?

It varies by concern. A specific anxiety or communication block can shift in a handful of sessions. Longer-standing patterns of low desire, mismatched libido, or recovery from betrayal usually take a few months of consistent work.

TM
Dr. Tom Murray, PhD, LMFT, CST
AASECT Certified Sex Therapist · Practice Owner

Dr. Murray is the owner of A Path to Wellness in Greensboro, NC, and an AASECT-certified sex therapist with decades of experience helping individuals and couples restore intimacy and sexual wellbeing. Meet the team →

Ready to talk to someone who gets it?

Sex therapy at A Path to Wellness is private, judgment-free, and led by certified specialists. Book a session in person in Greensboro or online anywhere in North Carolina.

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