How KAP supports survivors in reinhabiting the body and reconnecting with pleasure
When Being Touched Feels Like Watching From Across the Room
Avery’s partner kissed them gently — and suddenly they weren’t there.
Their body stayed.
Their mind floated away.
Their voice disappeared.
Nothing was wrong —
but something deep inside whispered, Not safe.
Dissociation isn’t a lack of desire or love —
it’s a survival state.
And for many trauma survivors, especially queer survivors whose bodies have been policed, shamed, or harmed, the body can feel like a location of danger rather than belonging.
Ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP) offers a doorway back into presence.
Why Dissociation Happens in Intimacy
When trauma occurs — particularly relational, sexual, or identity-based trauma — the nervous system sometimes selects:
Freeze or leave the body
as the only available protection.
This dorsal vagal shutdown is not a flaw.
It’s brilliance.
It’s survival.
Common signs of dissociation during intimacy:
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Losing time or awareness during sex
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Feeling like you’re observing from outside your body
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Sudden numbness or stillness
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Fading sensations — “I can’t feel anything”
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Difficulty speaking or asking for changes
-
Forgetting how pleasure started
As your proposal highlights, dissociation disrupts relational and sexual connection at the same time, requiring integrated treatment to restore embodied safety.
Amy Proposal Revised_CK KK- FIN…
How Ketamine Works in the Brain
Low-dose ketamine temporarily reduces activity in:
-
The Default Mode Network
(the part that loops trauma and self-judgment) -
Fear circuits
(amygdala hyperactivation) -
Rigid defenses
that keep emotion locked away
And increases:
-
Neuroplasticity — rapid connectivity growth
-
Access to blocked emotions
-
Openness to present-moment experience
It creates what researchers call a therapeutic window
where survival alarms quiet — and new learning can take root.
(Barber & Aaronson, 2022; Drozdz et al., 2022)
This is why your dissertation asserts KAP is uniquely positioned to support intimacy recovery — it enables relational engagement without emotional overwhelm.
Amy Proposal Revised_CK KK- FIN…
Ketamine as a Bridge Back Into the Body
Clients often describe ketamine states as:
“Seeing myself with compassion.”
“Feeling sensations without fear.”
“I remembered what my body is for — and it wasn’t pain.”
Unlike full psychedelics, ketamine’s dissociative quality allows:
✔ Distance from traumatic memory
✔ Without leaving the body entirely
That distance becomes choice.
Choice becomes agency.
Agency becomes pleasure.
Attachment + KAP + Presence
Ketamine can create internal safety —
but intimacy requires relational safety too.
Pairing KAP with Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) supports:
-
Vulnerability with a partner (instead of glancing away)
-
Naming needs (instead of shutting down)
-
Trusting care (instead of expecting harm)
As your integrated model emphasizes:
Neuroplasticity + attachment repair = sustained change
Amy Proposal Revised_CK KK- FIN…
A new narrative forms:
“My body is allowed to stay.
My pleasure is allowed to matter.”
Trauma-Informed KAP: What It Actually Looks Like
A typical healing arc (from your clinical framework):
Phase 1 — Preparation
-
Safety mapping
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Somatic awareness training
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Consent language building
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Identifying “embodiment goals”
Phase 2 — Medicine Session
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Guided support to stay connected to the body
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Introducing sensations slowly: temperature, texture, breath
-
Anchoring moments of joy, awe, or softness in the felt sense
Ketamine allows Avery to finally feel:
“My body belongs to me again.”
Phase 3 — Integration
-
EMDR to process trauma revealed
-
Sensate focus to deepen safety in pleasure
-
Partner co-regulation exercises
-
Identity reclamation for queer embodiment
What’s Possible After KAP
Survivors often notice changes like:
✔ Staying present during touch
✔ Feeling parts of the body that once felt numb
✔ Wanting intimacy again
✔ Saying “yes” and “no” more clearly
✔ Connecting pleasure to care — not fear
These may seem tiny from the outside.
But they are massive from the inside.
Somatic & Relational Embodiment Exercises After KAP
These integrate ketamine insights into the nervous system.
Practice 1: “Where Am I?” Anchoring
During intimacy or self-touch, ask:
-
“Can I feel my feet?”
-
“Is my breath moving?”
-
“Where in my body feels present?”
Presence is a place — not perfection.
Practice 2: Weighted Safety
Place a soft weighted object (heating pad, weighted blanket) on:
-
Belly
-
Pelvis
-
Heart
This increases interoception and nervous system grounding.
Practice 3: Co-Regulated Breath + Eye Gaze
Eye contact is optional — but powerful.
Try:
-
4-second inhale together
-
6–8-second exhale together
-
Notice tiny shifts (soft shoulders, hand reaching, sigh)
Attachment + ventral vagal activation = erotic connection
Practice 4: Sensation Tracking
After a moment of pleasure:
Name one sensation you liked
AND one emotion that came with it
Pleasure anchored in emotion → memory reconsolidation
Practice 5: Consent in the Body
Before intimacy, ask:
-
“What would feel most comforting right now?”
-
“What is a strong yes today?”
-
“Is there anything that feels too much?”
Safety fuels desire — not the other way around.
Caution + Boundaries
KAP is powerful — and should be facilitated by:
✔ Licensed mental health clinicians
✔ KAP-trained medical providers
✔ A trauma-informed treatment plan that includes integration
Ketamine is not a magic fix.
But it can catalyze transformation with the right support.
For Queer Survivors
Trauma rooted in identity-based harm creates distinct wounds:
-
Body as a site of judgment or punishment
-
Disconnection due to internalized shame
-
Pleasure associated with fear or secrecy
-
Gender and sexuality erased or attacked
KAP can support:
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Gender affirmation through embodiment
-
Queer erotic imagination
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Self-compassion in the body you have
-
Radical permission to take up space
Your existence deserves pleasure.
Your survival deserves softness.
For Partners
If someone you love dissociates:
-
Notice early signs: blank stare, stillness, no breath movement
-
Pause without pressure
-
Ask, “What would help you stay here with me?”
-
Offer grounding, warmth, and patience
-
Celebrate every moment of presence
You cannot pull them back —
but you can invite them home.
If This Resonated With You
Continue the December embodiment series:
Next Up (#24):
➡️ Reflection: Listening to Your Body’s Yes & No
(Rebuilding internal consent + nervous system boundaries)
Explore more on ketamine and trauma care:
→ /ketamine-assisted-therapy
→ /integrative-trauma-recovery
Authoritative External References (SEO/E-E-A-T)
-
Yale Medicine — Ketamine & Depression
https://www.yalemedicine.org/conditions/ketamine -
MAPS Research Portal
https://maps.org/research/ -
NIH: Dissociation and Trauma
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK207191/ -
Shapiro, F. (2018). EMDR Therapy.
-
Van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score.
Additional integrated citations:
Drozdz et al. (2022); Dore et al. (2019); Halstead et al. (2021); Cornfield et al. (2024); Khalifian et al. (2024)
If you’re curious how KAP might support your healing, subscribe for weekly updates on embodied trauma recovery tools — created for therapists, survivors, and anyone learning to trust their body again.