7 Types Sexual Disorders Inside The World Of Psychology


1. Exhibitionism
namely sexual deviations who like showing sex organs to others who do not want to see it and also likes to do autoeroticism (sexual practices stimulate yourself or masturbate) while showing it to others.

2. Fetishism
People with this disorder achieve sexual satisfaction with the use of objects, most often in women's clothing, shoes, stockings, or other clothing items.

3. Frotteurisme
People with this disorder often rubbed his genitals organs to others who do not want it. This behavior often occurs in busy, crowded place like a bus or in a crowded train.

4. Pedophilia
Pedophilia involves sexual activity with young children, generally under the age of 13. DSM-IV-TR describes criteria for people with pedophiles over the age of 16 years, and at least 5 years older than the boy who made sexual objects. People with pedophilia may be attracted to men or women, although almost two-fold more interest in boys. Usually people with this disorder develop procedures and strategies for gaining access and trust of children.

5. Sexual Masochism
Masochism is a term used for a specific sexual disorder, but who also has a wider use. This sexual disorder involves pleasure and joy derived from the pain on yourself, whether from others or with yourself. This disorder usually occurs in childhood or adolescence and is chronic. People with this disorder achieve satisfaction with the experience of pain. Masochism is the only paraphilia that experienced by women, about 5 percent makosis are women. The term comes from the name of an author from Austria in the 19th century, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, whose novels often the characters are obsessed with the combination of sex and pain. In a broader sense, masochism refers to the experience of receiving pleasure or satisfaction from suffering pain. The psychoanalytic view that masochism is aggression turned inward, to ourselves, when a person feels too guilty or afraid to express it outwardly.

6. Sexual sadism
An individual sadism achieve sexual satisfaction by hurting others. In psychoanalytic theory, sadism associated with the fear of castration, while the explanation of behavior Sadomasokisme (deviant sexual practice combining sadism and masochism) are feelings are physiologically similar to sexual arousal. Clinical diagnostic criteria for both disorders is a repetition of the behavior for at least six months, and significant difficulty or decreased ability to function as a result of behavioral or impulse or fantasy related. Sadomasokisme can occur in men and women, both heterosexual and homosexual relationships.

7. Transvestic fetishism
This disorder is characterized by heterosexual men who wear women's clothes in order to achieve sexual response. This disorder begins in adolescence and still secretly (without wanting to know other people), and then as an adult female completely and began to dress in public. A small percentage of men with transvestic fetishism may experience dysphoria (unhappiness with original gender), who then perform hormonal treatment or sex change operation to make them live permanently as women.

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