As polyamory continues to make its way into the mainstream, more and more people are exploring consensual nonmonogamy in the hope of experiencing more love, connection, sex, freedom, and support. While for many, the move expands personal horizons, for others, the transition can be challenging, leaving them blindsided and overwhelmed. Beyond the initial transition to nonmonogamy, many struggle with the root issues beneath the symptoms of broken agreements, communication challenges, increased fighting, and persistent jealousy. Polyamorous psychotherapist Jessica Fern shares the insights she has gained through thousands of hours working with clients in consensually nonmonogamous relationships. Using a grounded theory approach, she explores the underlying challenges that nonmonogamous individuals and partners can experience after their first steps, offering practical strategies for transforming them into opportunities for new levels of clarity and intimacy. Polywise provides both the conceptual framework to better understand the shift from monogamy to nonmonogamy and the tools to navigate the next steps, allowing you to not just survive in open relationships, but thrive in them.
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Product Details
Weight: 318g
Dimensions: 133 x 203mm
Publication Date: 25 Aug 2023
Publisher: Thornapple Press
Publication City/Country: Canada
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781990869143
About Jessica Fern
Jessica Fern is a psychotherapist and trauma and relationship expert. The author of Polysecure: Attachment Trauma and Consensual Nonmonogamy Jessica works with individuals couples and people in multiple-partner relationships who no longer want to be limited by their reactive patterns cultural conditioning insecure attachment styles and past traumas. David Cooley is a professional restorative justice facilitator diversity and privilege awareness trainer and biligual cultural broker. He works with nonmonogamous and LGBTQ clients incorporating modalities including trauma-informed care attachment theory somatic practices narrative theory and mindfulness-based techniques. Carrie Jenkins is a professor of philosophy at the University of British Columbia and the author of What Love Is (and What it Could Be) and Sad Love: Romance and the Search for Meaning. She holds a PhD in philosophy from Trinity College Cambridge and an MFA in creative writing from UBC. She has been featured in The Atlantic the New York Times the Globe and Mail and the Telegraph among others.