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Sex Positivity in Practice: Integrating Training, Assessment, and Relational Trauma

In this issue of the Journal of Counseling Sexology & Sexual Wellness, we bring forward five scholarly contributions that together illuminate the profound interplay between sexuality, mental health, relational dynamics, and counselor professional development. Although each article stands firmly on its own empirical and conceptual foundation, taken together they highlight a core message: sexuality is inseparable from human wellness, and counselors must be prepared to approach these topics with nuance, cultural humility, and empirical rigor.

Our issue opens with an article offering a comprehensive and practical framework for integrating sex-positive principles across counselor training and supervision. The authors’ ten strategies—ranging from intentional self-reflection to expanding professional knowledge and modeling inclusive practices—establish a developmental roadmap for preparing future counselors to engage clients’ sexual concerns competently and ethically. They rightly highlight the profession’s longstanding training gap in sexuality education and call for systemic curricular transformation. Their work sets the philosophical groundwork for the remainder of this issue.

Complementing this pedagogical foundation is a second article describing the development and evaluation of the Sex Positivity Inventory for Counselors (SPI-C). Where the first contribution offers strategies, this one provides an empirically grounded tool for assessing counselors’ attitudes, knowledge, and skills. Together, these two articles advance a unified vision for counselor preparation: one that is measurable, developmentally informed, and aligned with multicultural and social justice competencies. The SPI-C not only operationalizes the construct of sex positivity but also offers a mechanism for evaluating training effectiveness—bridging the gap between philosophy and practice.

The issue then shifts to two articles that confront the emotional and relational challenges many clients encounter in their intimate lives. A large-scale study of individuals and couples experiencing infertility offers a deeply humane and statistically rigorous exploration of how infertility affects individual well-being, relational satisfaction, resilience, depression, and shame. The findings underscore infertility as a biopsychosocial experience—one that reverberates across identity, partnership, and quality of life. For counselors, this research reinforces the necessity of attending not only to symptoms but also to the relational systems in which infertility distress unfolds.

Similarly attentive to relational trauma, a literature review on infidelity and posttraumatic stress challenges the field to reconsider longstanding assumptions about what constitutes trauma. The author argues that the emotional, cognitive, and physiological responses many betrayed partners experience align with diagnostic patterns of PTSD, even though infidelity does not conventionally meet traditional trauma criteria. The implications are profound: adopting a trauma-informed conceptualization of infidelity may allow counselors to more accurately validate clients’ experiences and offer evidence-based interventions. In partnership with the infertility study, this article pushes the profession to broaden its understanding of relational wounds and their mental health consequences.

Finally, an investigation of test conditions and demographic variables in the Sexual Dependency Inventory–Revised 4.0 reminds us that the tools we rely on to assess sexual concerns are only as strong as the conditions under which they are administered. The authors demonstrate that response validity—including inconsistency, exaggeration, and underreporting—can be significantly shaped by variables such as age, gender, and testing environment. As counselors increasingly utilize standardized instruments in sexuality-related assessment, this article offers crucial guidance for ethical and accurate interpretation.

Together, these five articles weave a compelling narrative: sexology-informed counseling requires both relational attunement and methodological precision. From pedagogy to assessment, from couple dynamics to individual trauma, this issue calls on counselors, educators, and supervisors to expand their competence, confront their assumptions, and champion client-centered, culturally responsive practices.

As editor, I am grateful to the scholars whose work appears in these pages, and I am hopeful that readers will find in this issue both challenge and inspiration. The field of counseling sexology is rapidly evolving. With research such as this, we move closer to a profession capable of meeting the full spectrum of human sexual experience with compassion, knowledge, and integrity.

Articles

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The Counselor Educator’s Guide to Sex Positivity: Ten Strategies for Enhancing Teaching and Supervision
Lorraine J. Guth, Ashley R. Niccolai, Moirin Reynolds, and Dana Kirkpatrick

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Development and Evaluation of the Sex Positivity Inventory for Counselors
M. Ashley Burks, Jennifer Gerlach, and Joshua C. Watson