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Overcoming Fear Of Physical Touch & Intimacy

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Sweet_E

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I was able to eliminate a work-related trigger through a form of exposure therapy that I customized to meet my needs. I may have shared that experience in another thread. Now I'm feeling compelled to work on physical intimacy. This is huge!

I bought a book by Wendy Maltz about relearning physical intimacy. She has you do certain exercises that are progressively more intimate. It starts out with stuff like doing a form of patty cake. Frankly, the exercises seemed really cheesy and weird to me. I also thought she did not address deeply enough how to re-center yourself if you are triggered as well as other details. So I'm going to create my own system for doing exposure therapy.

Currently, my husband and I have very minimal physical contact. It is very rare and when it occurs, it is very G-rated. When it does occur, it is because I initiate it. This arrangement has resulted in a great reduction of stress for me and I feel like I am in charge of what happens to my body. At the same time, I know the triggers and fear will not go away on their own. I will need to put in some work to be able to get over my fear of physical touch.

So far I've come up with a list of physical touch experiences with which I can explore. Right now I have about 24 actions on the list. They consist of things like, "sit side by side and hold hands." Eventually, I will add more intimate activities but I have to proceed with baby steps. I plan to print out the exercises on slips of paper and select them at random, like pulling names from a hat.

Details I need to figure out are:

- What activities will I do prior to the exercises to ground myself?
- How will I determine how much to do the exercises at a time? It could be a set period of time or a set number of exercises.
- How long will I do each exercise? Perhaps I can set up a limit of 1 minute at first or until I want to stop. Need to determine if the slips of paper specify the time or do I keep it flexible so I can adapt to how I'm feeling in the moment?
- What should my husband's responsibilities be? What should he do if he feels hurt or rejected because I feel triggered.
- What will the ritual be if I get triggered? I would like to come up with some kind of phrase I can say where my husband feels the least hurt if I want to stop.
- What should our rituals be for after the exercises? I envision that we each spend time separate from each other immediately after the exercises so that we can each reflect and reground. What would be a good stress reliever for my husband? (He has very few stress management skills presently and just started going to therapy for this.)
- Where in the house do we perform the activities? So far, I think I want the activities throughout the house so that I don't develop a negative association with any particular place. However, at work, the trigger always occurred at my desk and I was able to conquer it. We could pick one place initially at first and then rotate places. I want to avoid doing it in my yoga room which is my sanctuary/ safe place. Whatever the location in the house, I will need to develop ways to make the environment comfortable. I could surround the area with things that make me happy and comforted like fresh flowers, candles or aromatherapy, a soft blanket, some crystals that are supposed to have comforting properties, etc.

I just thought it would be helpful for me to share my process/ thinking so far.

Has anyone else ever done something like this? Or was there another way you conquered fear of touch?

On a side note, the psychiatrist I used to visit for short term disability make a statement like, "Overcoming intimacy issues is extremely hard for people." He said it with a pessimistic tone like he was trying to prevent me from getting my hopes up that I could overcome this. I choose not to listen to the pessimism of others. It's a shame it had to come from someone on my treatment team. My therapist, on the other hand, is a ray of sunshine who is always cheering me on! I am going to share my thoughts with her and work on some of the details together.

My other triggers, are having to trust people in general and experience poor or confusing communication. Those triggers are more complex and I'm at a loss on how to tackle those - that's probably another thread.
 
My other triggers, are having to trust people in general and experience poor or confusing communication.

I've found skills training really effective there. Paul Ekman has written world-leading stuff on catching liars & his website is a great start. And... it's just plain difficult. If you approach it in the same way that you're approaching the problem with intimacy, I'm confident you'll cover every angle really thoroughly. (That's quite impressive!)
 
This hasn't been a very active thread but I will update anyway. The hubby and I had a discussion about this plan and it was really constructive!!! In the past, he's not been a very good problem solver and would rather ignore a situation in hopes that it works itself out. But he was totally onboard and super supportive. He's going to talk to his T about stuff he can do to cope if he feels rejected or stressed at any point. This is great because now he has a more tangible reason to go to therapy. He had dragged his feet in going for a very long time. I'm excited to speak with my T about this too.
 
My ex boyfriend has a fear of physical intimacy but he likes sex. It improved a lot over the time we were together. I think doing other things together that involved physical activity was good, like going for a walk or cooking together. Nothing all that unusual but I think it helped to get us in sync. We both work out. So anyway I had to make a lot of effort with the preamble to make sure it wasn't triggering for him. By preamble I mean the intimacy that happens before anything more... um ha I can see why no-one else posted in this thread :p Sometimes in the beginning he would get freaked out and freeze but not say anything because he though it was rude and might offend me. So I just had to keep being quite cautious and watching his face. I would accept rejection if it came without question but the next time I saw him try again. He understood that my comfort and creating a good level of intimacy between us were important to the overall experience being at it's best.

The thing I really had to work on in myself was that sometimes he felt safe and expressed himself most affectionately. But then a lot of the time he was triggered or had not had proper rest, alone time etc and wasn't really firing on all cylinders intimacy wise. If he was still feeling like sharing company with me I'd just try for what I wanted and see what happened. The inconsistency was difficult for me as a partner because I would have expectations. The layers of self-awareness, defense mechanisms etc made it very difficult to navigate, so I had to be adaptable and sometimes just drop all expectations. Sometimes if he was being physically quite unresponsive I would just ask him if it was OK for me to take the lead and we'd have a lot of fun like that. I did check many MANY times that what I was doing was OK, plainly telling him what I wanted to do and getting a clear response to check that and that he wasn't just dissociating or getting freaked out or anything. I think he was just feeling emotionally drained yet could function physically and still wanted us to have fun. It felt weird at first but then it was fine as long as it was only some of the time. LMK if this was helpful.
 
I recently began dating again after about 18 years. I had to mentally prepare myself for any sort of touch before I went on the first date. I was proud of the fact I was able to be hugged. The guy who I was going on a date with was encouraging, but I guess I wasn't able to be intimate enough for him. The first kiss, caught me off guard and I felt a bit trapped, which triggered a flashback of being backed up against a locker in a dark hallway after a music practice in college. The guy asked if I didn't like kissing as I sure wasn't into it....little did he know I was fighting to stay present and not disassociate. The third date with the guy I thought went much better and I was more relaxed and it felt like intimacy was there. He sent me a text later stating he didn't think I'd be able to be intimate enough for him. It hurt, but then I realized how far I had come in less than a month and how much I had enjoyed what touch we had had. I am proud of myself....I set boundaries, I was able to remember how to kiss, I finally was helped to realize touch can be pleasurable and not just painful. I do believe I can be more intimate when the right person comes along. It has taken me a long time to get to the point to be vulnerable enough to date again and perhaps one day love someone intimately again.
 
My ex boyfriend has a fear of physical intimacy but he likes sex. It improved a lot over th...

Thanks so much! There is a lot of good stuff in there. I know my husband has talked about how the expectations and inconsistency can be difficult. We thought that only having physical touch if I either initiated it or during a specified time each week.

I recently began dating again after about 18 years. I had to mentally prepare myself for any sort of to...

Wow! That is amazing! I really love your approach to dating, your positive attitude and recognizing your accomplishments.

Dating is such journey!
 
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Hi @Sweet_E
I was just curious about how this is working out for you. Do you feel...

We haven't officially started the exercises yet. However, I have been a little bit more physically affectionate here and there. I had a breakthrough, which I may have written about elsewhere though. I realized that it is intensely important to me that my husband figures out how to deal with his own stress. I have been puzzled over what seemed to be a boundaries issue because I'm usually good at maintaining boundaries. I realized that when he is stressed, he becomes aloof. My caregiver who abused me was aloof except for when he was seducing me or leading up to the abuse. So I realized my husband was reminding me of my abuser's behavior. My fear is that if I do something (or refuse to do something) that my husband will feel rejected and become aloof. Then it will feel like reenacting things with my abuser.

We still plan to do the exercises but we haven't officially done them yet in a structured way. I have been feeling more affectionate. I think partly it is because my doctor discovered some vitamin deficiencies and the supplements I'm taking have been helping me feel the inkling of a libido again!

I will try to keep you posted. Are you thinking of trying something similar?
 
Thank you for your reply.
I have met a girl that has similiar issues with physical intimacy and I am just trying to read up on peoples experiences working with this. If our relationship develops, at some point this would be an issue that has to be adressed and I really do not want to suggest things that could be retraumatizing or make things worse rather than better. I know every person is different, so what works for you might not be something that will work for her, but it will be great to know how things work out and if you feel that your plan leads to a personal, positive progress. I appreciate that you are sharing!

(I apologize for the imperfect english, it's not my mother tongue)
 
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