We all remember the period when statements were made that the Soviet people had no sexual problems. But that time of absurdities is over: the mask of hypocrisy has been cast aside, and it has became clear that we are the same as all the people on Earth, that nothing human is alien to us. Only one islet perhaps remains in the ocean of people passed over in silence and deprived of the right to love, happiness, and sexual relations. That islet represents the world of mentally ill people, subject to exclusion from society, to isolation. It is probably difficult for the new generation of psychiatrists to imagine how clumsily and slowly society has restored their human rights to the mentally ill in last place, perhaps, their right to an intimate life. The ideas of rehabilitation, imbued with a humanistic sense and addressed to the personality of the ill person, which have been developed in Russian psychiatry by Professor M.M. Kabanov [1] and have absorbed the best traditions of Russian and foreign psychiatric schools, have served as the moral, scientific, and organizing impetus for progressive changes. The end of the institutionalism era and discharge of mental patients from psychiatric hospitals have revealed a vacuum in contemporary knowledge that could allow the development of an opti-