An Assault Victim Finds Hope

Typically, when we hear the term “post-traumatic stress disorder” (PTSD), we automatically think about veterans, who are often the most heavily impacted by the frightening effects of PTSD.  But we know that PTSD can develop after a very stressful, frightening or distressing event, or after a prolonged traumatic experience. 

Antuanette Gomez is a PTSD sufferer and while she experiences some of the “typical” PTSD symptoms like numbness, anxiety, and a mix of physical and mental issues, as a victim of sexual assault, she was also experiencing pain during intercourse and sexual anxiety as well.   It was after listening to a doctor speak about CBD and PTSD at a Women Grow Summit, she started to truly understand the volume of people living every day in pain – not just physical, but mental.  Her next step was to begin working with Soldiers of Creation, a gender inclusive resource center in Toronto that helps survivors of assault. 

In the months after Gomez was raped, she used the center as a resource to learn about her own trauma and discovered that cannabis would become a pivotal catalyst for her own healing.  She conquered sleepless nights by learning to calm her troubled mind – she has a vaporizer  next to her bed, and finds that smoking/vaping cannabis was the fastest way for her rape-induced-PTSD anxiety at night. 

Her low libido was a result of the shame and guilt from her rape, and sex was painful.  She and her partner talked about the experience together and learned how to communicate.  Unfortunately, that didn’t eliminate the physical pain she experienced during intercourse, and once again, cannabis provided a potential solution.  Gomez tried cannabis suppositories, usually recommended for women with endometriosis and fibroids, and found they gave her back her sex drive, but also helped her reproductive system truly relax and she was elated.

Today, Gomez is the founder of Pleasure Peaks, a company specializing in Cannabis Pleasure Counselling among other services.  They help people learn how cannabis can be used for pain, but also for “pleasure management.”  Pleasure Peaks partners with Soldiers of Creation, who also call her an educator in their practice.  Pleasure Peaks sells a “Sisters Pipe” for which 50% of each sale goes back to Soldiers of Creation.  Gomez has found a way to not only get her life back, but make her negative experience one that makes her stronger AND fuels her career to help others.

To learn more about cannabis and sexual health, please visit the website below. 

(Photo courtesy of Antuanette Gomez)

Sexual Health

Recently while teaching “Cannabis 101” to a group of women primarily between 30 and 70 years-old the subject of sexual health came up. It was the topic everyone had the most questions about as approximately half of women suffer sexual dysfunction in some way at some point in their lives. Decreased desire, inability to orgasm, painful sex are very common. I didn’t have time to share my story with the group, but I wanted to share it here.

I am in a healthy relationship with someone I am very sexually attracted to and sex never disappoints. However, we have two kids at home and two dogs that sleep in our bed. Our lives are very busy and we are often exhausted by the time our children have gone to sleep.

Our joke is that we “need to preheat the oven,” now this can mean a variety of different things, but most often, preheating the oven is just turning down our worries and stressors. Sometimes when the house is quiet for the first time in the evening it is the first time I can think. Think about that email, my to-do list for the next day, what we need from the grocery store, and when I am doing this the oven is ice cold. My desire to get something accomplished strongly outweighs my desire for sex.

When I received my medical cannabis card it was for migraines,  nothing directly related to sexual dysfunction, I quickly noticed that a small dose of THC and CBD in the evening helped me relax and get my mind off that damn to-do list. It’s like I could instantly feel my shoulders relax for the first time all day. I wanted to experience something enjoyable, not just reply to emails or get caught up on the day’s news. I can’t say that cannabis has drastically improved my sexual health, but it has improved my ability to relax and has increased my desire.

Cannabis has been shown to improve the sexual function of both men and women and I review the research in the article below. Love, touch, and sex are important parts of who we are as humans and are clearly important to the group of women mentioned above. There aren’t a lot of options to help improve sexual function, but cannabis is one that is showing a lot of promise. 

Missouri Patients Should Get Ready to Have A Lot More Sex

Why do we see an increase in sexual activity once states implement cannabis laws?

Could be an increase in desire, a better functioning endocannabinoid system, less pain, less stress? Looks to be a combination of all of the above. 

Check out this article written by our nurse April Hatch MSN, RN for Greenway Magazine.