Vaginismus is a condition in which, during sexual intercourse, the muscles surrounding the woman’s vagina contract involuntarily and as a result do not allow intercourse, or intercourse becomes very difficult. During this time, the woman feels fear, anxiety, and worry, and she involuntarily closes her vaginal muscles and prevents intercourse with the fear that she will feel pain. The contractions experienced in vaginismus develop as a reflex and occur involuntarily. Here, it is not in the woman’s control. When those fears completely fill her mind, the woman cannot have intercourse. In fact, here, the woman’s tightening herself is a defense mechanism against something bad in the subconscious. Women have intense anxieties and worries toward sexuality. Teaching the woman from childhood that sexuality is something bad, that she will be harmed, can cause involuntary, reactive contraction of the vaginal and sometimes the whole body muscles during intercourse. As a result of these contractions, sexual intercourse can become extremely painful or impossible. There may also be bad sexual experiences in the past. For example, harassment, rape, or internal sexual intercourse being very painful, or hearsay, wrong and incomplete information about sexuality can lay the groundwork for our vaginismus. Also, in societies where strict social rules dominate and the idea that sexuality is shameful, sinful, and forbidden is established, we encounter vaginismus and other sexual problems very frequently. The woman having a bad experience or belief about sexuality, sometimes a bad gynecological examination, childbirth or abortion story can also constitute the reasons for secondary vaginismus developing later in women; also wrong or incomplete information about internal sexual intercourse, beliefs that the penis will harm the body, the fear that there will be excessive bleeding and pain during the breaking of the hymen, stories heard about this, or anxiety about getting pregnant can lead to vaginismus. Um, in the subconscious of the woman with vaginismus there is an intense feeling of anxiety and fear toward sexuality. It is a defense mechanism she developed against these fears. This woman can also suffer pain with serious contractions in her and other regions. In the woman with vaginismus, generally there is no anatomical problem in the vagina. The problem is in the fears and anxieties in the subconscious. Women with vaginismus can also have beliefs that their vaginas are extremely narrow or small. Whereas this thought is completely wrong. Because **** is so flexible that even a child can come out of there. The problem is not actually down there, but in the fears and anxieties in the mind. Hypnotherapy is also very effective in the treatment of vaginismus by clearing these fears and anxieties from the subconscious and by teaching behavioral cognitive methods to the client, the patient under hypnotherapy.