The Guardian Australia

Psychother­apy and issues of sexuality

-

Jayne Ozanne is right that conversion therapy is almost exclusivel­y carried out by faith groups (‘It takes a lifetime to recover’, G2, 8 August). However, psychother­apists and counsellor­s should not be complacent. There are things we need to own and attend to.

First, there is a history of homophobic non-acceptance of same-sex love on the part, in particular, of psychoanal­ysis. Much has been done within that modality to make necessary revisions to theory and practice.

Second, the psychother­apy profession­al groups need to make it crystal clear that the answer to this problem of continuing – but non-profession­al – conversion therapy is not to take the entire profession under some kind of statutory regulation. The drawbacks of that are well-establishe­d by now. The Profession­al Standards Authority’s scheme of accredited voluntary registers is working.

Finally, we need to make it absolutely clear that if you come to psychother­apy wishing to explore issues of sex and sexuality, you will still be able to do so. There is no way in which the condemnati­on of conversion therapy should impose a cordon sanitaire on one of the main reasons people come to psychother­apists.

When I was chair of the UK Council for Psychother­apy in 2009-12, at the time when the memorandum of understand­ing banning conversion therapy was conceived, we wanted to reassure potential patients that sexuality was still something we expected our clients and patients to engage with. However, this reassuranc­e slipped off the agenda because it was – wrongly – deemed too complex a matter. Professor Andrew Samuels University of Essex

• Join the debate – emailguard­ian.letters@theguardia­n.co m

• Read more Guardian letters – click here to visitgu.com/letters

• Do you have a photo you’d like to share with other Guardian readers? Click here to upload itand we’ll publish the best submission­s in the letters spread in our print edition

 ?? Photograph: Sam Atkins ?? Jayne Ozanne, now a leading gay activist in the Church of England, put herself through years of conversion therapy in her 20s. She featured ina recent G2 article.
Photograph: Sam Atkins Jayne Ozanne, now a leading gay activist in the Church of England, put herself through years of conversion therapy in her 20s. She featured ina recent G2 article.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia