Image 1 of 1
POST CONFERENCE TRAINING NOV 9, 2026 Ethical and Practical Hypnosis Strategies for Safe Sexual Wellbeing Support With Luigi Romanelli - Clinical Hypnotherapist and Sexologist
Immediately gain usable techniques when sexual wellbeing concerns arise in clinical work 🛠️
Sexual themes often surface in hypnotherapy through anxiety, pressure, or the after-effects of earlier experiences. Many hypnotherapists encounter these moments indirectly. They are often left uncertain about what is appropriate to address, how far to go, or how to respond without crossing professional boundaries or causing harm.
This training offers a clear and grounded way to work with these presentations using skills hypnotherapists already have. The focus is on applying those skills with greater precision, safety, and ethical confidence.
The training does not teach sexual techniques or erotic material 🚫
Instead, it focuses on: • regulation • containment • restoring a sense of choice and steadiness
These factors are often the real drivers of sexual wellbeing difficulties.
The approach taken throughout the training is sex-positive without being sexually explicit
It is grounded in: • safety 🔒 • respect • unconditional positive regard
It supports clients across diverse sexualities, identities, and relationship structures, without assumption or agenda. The emphasis remains on regulation, consent, and ethical presence rather than sexual content.
Participants will learn how to use steady, non-erotic hypnotic language that:
• settles the nervous system • reduces pressure 😌 • addresses anxiety-based patterns beneath sexual concerns
The approaches taught are designed to feel familiar within standard hypnotherapy sessions. They do not require a different modality or a change in professional identity
A clear emphasis is placed on scope of practice and ethical clarity. This includes:
• what hypnotherapists can safely work with ✔️
• what sits outside scope.
• how and when to refer without abandoning the client.
It also addresses how to maintain clear boundaries while remaining supportive and effective.
Consent is treated as an ongoing clinical process. This includes:
• how consent is established • revisited • respected throughout hypnosis work involving sensitive themes 💬
Mandatory reporting responsibilities are also clarified where these intersect with sexual wellbeing work. The training outlines clear referral pathways and options for professional consultation when needed.
This ensures hypnotherapists are not left working in isolation.
It supports ethical, well-held practice when presentations sit at the edge of scope.
Participants receive practical take-away resources including:
• example language • ethical frameworks • referral guidance
The training addresses common professional experiences such as:
• uncertainty about consent and language • concern about “getting it wrong” • managing client embarrassment or shame • reducing guilt and self-blame • staying grounded when sexual material emerges unexpectedly
By the end of the training, participants will be able to:
✔️ recognise presentations shaped by anxiety, pressure, and disconnection
✔️ respond with confidence and steadiness
✔️ apply strategies that prioritise safety and regulation
✔️ use language that reduces shame without sexualising the work
✔️ make clearer decisions about collaboration and referral
Nov 9th - 9am - Lunch Included - AFTERPAY PAYMENT OPTION AVAILABLE AT CHECKOUT
Immediately gain usable techniques when sexual wellbeing concerns arise in clinical work 🛠️
Sexual themes often surface in hypnotherapy through anxiety, pressure, or the after-effects of earlier experiences. Many hypnotherapists encounter these moments indirectly. They are often left uncertain about what is appropriate to address, how far to go, or how to respond without crossing professional boundaries or causing harm.
This training offers a clear and grounded way to work with these presentations using skills hypnotherapists already have. The focus is on applying those skills with greater precision, safety, and ethical confidence.
The training does not teach sexual techniques or erotic material 🚫
Instead, it focuses on: • regulation • containment • restoring a sense of choice and steadiness
These factors are often the real drivers of sexual wellbeing difficulties.
The approach taken throughout the training is sex-positive without being sexually explicit
It is grounded in: • safety 🔒 • respect • unconditional positive regard
It supports clients across diverse sexualities, identities, and relationship structures, without assumption or agenda. The emphasis remains on regulation, consent, and ethical presence rather than sexual content.
Participants will learn how to use steady, non-erotic hypnotic language that:
• settles the nervous system • reduces pressure 😌 • addresses anxiety-based patterns beneath sexual concerns
The approaches taught are designed to feel familiar within standard hypnotherapy sessions. They do not require a different modality or a change in professional identity
A clear emphasis is placed on scope of practice and ethical clarity. This includes:
• what hypnotherapists can safely work with ✔️
• what sits outside scope.
• how and when to refer without abandoning the client.
It also addresses how to maintain clear boundaries while remaining supportive and effective.
Consent is treated as an ongoing clinical process. This includes:
• how consent is established • revisited • respected throughout hypnosis work involving sensitive themes 💬
Mandatory reporting responsibilities are also clarified where these intersect with sexual wellbeing work. The training outlines clear referral pathways and options for professional consultation when needed.
This ensures hypnotherapists are not left working in isolation.
It supports ethical, well-held practice when presentations sit at the edge of scope.
Participants receive practical take-away resources including:
• example language • ethical frameworks • referral guidance
The training addresses common professional experiences such as:
• uncertainty about consent and language • concern about “getting it wrong” • managing client embarrassment or shame • reducing guilt and self-blame • staying grounded when sexual material emerges unexpectedly
By the end of the training, participants will be able to:
✔️ recognise presentations shaped by anxiety, pressure, and disconnection
✔️ respond with confidence and steadiness
✔️ apply strategies that prioritise safety and regulation
✔️ use language that reduces shame without sexualising the work
✔️ make clearer decisions about collaboration and referral
Nov 9th - 9am - Lunch Included - AFTERPAY PAYMENT OPTION AVAILABLE AT CHECKOUT