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Clinical Perspectives on Kink: Your Brain on Kink: The Neurobiology of Kink
Title of Event: Clinical Perspectives on Kink: Your Brain on Kink: The Neurobiology of Kink
Description of Event:
This workshop walks participants through what is happening “under the hood” during kink play and why that matters for clinical care. Using a brain and body based frame, we look at what lights up during kink, including the limbic system, prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, hypothalamus, periaqueductal gray, and anterior cingulate cortex. We explore how these regions work together to shape fear, excitement, safety, memory, and meaning in scenes, and how they help explain why certain experiences can feel intense, comforting, clarifying, or even healing. Building on recent psychobiological research, we examine how consensual BDSM scenes can shift stress hormones and pain perception in ways that activate reward and bonding systems and can turn pain into pleasure or deep calm in the right context (Wuyts et al., 2020; Wuyts & Morrens, 2022; Dunkley et al., 2020). The program will also highlight how these states can support trauma processing, embodiment, and integration for some individuals, while at the same time acknowledging that repetitive, high-intensity experiences can mimic compulsive or addictive cycles when not grounded in care, consent, and reflection. Participants will be invited to consider how nervous system concepts are often oversimplified in popular discourse and how a more nuanced understanding of arousal, regulation, and recovery can inform clinical conversations with kink-involved clients. By the end of the session, participants will be better equipped to discuss kink in biologically informed, non pathologizing ways, to differentiate between supportive and harmful patterns of engagement, and to integrate this knowledge into assessment, psychoeducation, and treatment planning.
Date of Event: May 21, 2026
Time of Event: 9am-12pm PT / 11am-2pm CT / 12-3pm ET.
Location: Online through Zoom and Recorded
Sexuality Education (SE) Training:
SE4. Theory and methods of approaches to sexuality education with specific populations (e.g., youth, older adults, couples, ethnic/ cultural/ faith-based populations, LGBTQ people, people with disabilities).
Sex Therapy (ST) Training:
ST2. Techniques of sex-related assessment and diagnosis of the Psychosexual Disorders described in the current edition of the DSM.
Presenter/Speaker: Yulinda Renee Rahman, PhD in Clinical Sexology: Therapeutic Modality Creator, Program Developer, Educator, Researcher, LCPC
Contact Name: Office of CE at The Chicago School
Contact Email: officeofce@thechicagoschool.edu
Event Website: https://tcsppofficeofce.com/may_21_2026/
AASECT Approved CEs: 3.0