TIME: 10am - Noon Mountain time
DATE: Saturday, April 26th, 2025
LOCATION: On Zoom, Link emailed ~1 hour before class starts
Join Sex educator Kylan Pinkelman in a skills-based class on embracing and supporting your sexual self after trauma. Kylan is a pre-licensed counseling intern in the final stages of completing a Masters in Counseling, their work is focused on human sexuality and trauma-informed care rooted in social and disability justice frameworks.
In this class we will discuss:
- The nervous system and its role in responding to “triggers,” including signs and signals of dissociation
- Identifying and communicating your personal needs for intimacy
- Recognizing the role of the partner in navigating personal boundaries
- Skills and exercises to help curate a well-resourced toolbox for navigating life as a survivor.
This class is designed for survivors of sexual trauma. This is not group therapy and we will not disclose our personal traumas. The intention of this group is to share and build skills to help guide our individual journeys through life as survivors. Additional resources are available for those seeking more substantial support.
Access Info: This is a virtual class. Please follow customary Zoom/video meeting etiquette. Note that your camera is set to be off at the start of this class. You're welcome to be on camera if you want to be.
Kylan (they/them) is a sex educator, graduate student, and a pre-licensed counseling intern. They are in the final stretch of the Masters in Counseling program at Southwestern College, focusing their study on human sexuality, neurodivergence, and the myriad ways these intersections overlap. Kylan’s approach to sex education is direct, honest, and light-hearted; balancing providing accurate, accessible information with the understanding that we all need a little more whimsy in our lives. Outside of work, Kylan prefers spending time with their plants, wrangling their two kittens, and doing nothing (rest is resistance, baby.)
4.26.25 INTIMACY FOR SURVIVORS
- Unit price
- /per
Adding product to your cart
TIME: 10am - Noon Mountain time
DATE: Saturday, April 26th, 2025
LOCATION: On Zoom, Link emailed ~1 hour before class starts
Join Sex educator Kylan Pinkelman in a skills-based class on embracing and supporting your sexual self after trauma. Kylan is a pre-licensed counseling intern in the final stages of completing a Masters in Counseling, their work is focused on human sexuality and trauma-informed care rooted in social and disability justice frameworks.
In this class we will discuss:
- The nervous system and its role in responding to “triggers,” including signs and signals of dissociation
- Identifying and communicating your personal needs for intimacy
- Recognizing the role of the partner in navigating personal boundaries
- Skills and exercises to help curate a well-resourced toolbox for navigating life as a survivor.
This class is designed for survivors of sexual trauma. This is not group therapy and we will not disclose our personal traumas. The intention of this group is to share and build skills to help guide our individual journeys through life as survivors. Additional resources are available for those seeking more substantial support.
Access Info: This is a virtual class. Please follow customary Zoom/video meeting etiquette. Note that your camera is set to be off at the start of this class. You're welcome to be on camera if you want to be.
Kylan (they/them) is a sex educator, graduate student, and a pre-licensed counseling intern. They are in the final stretch of the Masters in Counseling program at Southwestern College, focusing their study on human sexuality, neurodivergence, and the myriad ways these intersections overlap. Kylan’s approach to sex education is direct, honest, and light-hearted; balancing providing accurate, accessible information with the understanding that we all need a little more whimsy in our lives. Outside of work, Kylan prefers spending time with their plants, wrangling their two kittens, and doing nothing (rest is resistance, baby.)
Body safe
pleasure tested
non toxic