Jessica Fern is a psychotherapist, public speaker, and trauma and
relationship expert. In her international private practice, 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, helping them to embody new possibilities in life and
love. Learn more at JessicaFern.com.
David Cooley is a professional restorative justice facilitator,
diversity and privilege awareness trainer, and bilingual cultural
broker. He works with non-monogamous 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.
‘In her latest book, Jessica Fern has crafted the map to guide
readers and lovers venturing into the uncharted. With great care
and necessary nuance, Polywise is a must-read for anyone navigating
open relationships.’
*Esther Perel*
‘I often say there’s being polyamorous and then there’s being
polyamorous well. I believe Polywise can equip you to do just
that.’
*Evita Sawyers, author of A Polyamory Devotional*
‘Most of us are content to “make polyamory work” and keep ourselves
and our partners reasonably happy. Jessica Fern is taking us far
beyond that to a much deeper level of understanding of our psyches
and the underpinnings of our relationship dynamics. She and her
co-conspirator David Cooley have bared their souls about the
evolution of their own poly lives and relationships, as well as
sharing countless illuminating stories about their clients’
struggles … Required reading and a must-have for your poly
bookshelf!’
*Kathy Labriola, author of The Polyamory Breakup Book*
‘An exceptional achievement that will be required reading for
anyone practicing consensual non-monogamy, from seasoned veteran to
timid newbie alike.’
*Emily Sotelo Matlack, co-host of the Multiamory podcast and
co-author of Multiamory: essential tools for modern
relationships*
‘If you are ready to think more deeply about communication,
codependency, conflict, and repair in your most important
relationships, Polywise is required reading.’
*Alexandra H. Solomon, PhD, author of Love Every Day and
host of Reimagining Love*
‘In Polywise, Jessica Fern and David Cooley help readers understand
the often unseen root causes of symptoms and give them the
strategies they need so their relationships can actually
thrive.’
*JoEllen Notte, author of The Monster Under the Bed: sex,
depression, and the conversations we aren’t having and In
It Together: navigating depression with partners, friends, and
family*
Praise for Polysecure: ‘A deeply compassionate book, Polysecure is
a great read for both therapists who serve people in consensually
non-monogamous (CNM) relationships and laypeople who are interested
in what makes for secure attachments in such relationships. It
offers an excellent summary of conventional attachment theory,
critiques and re-interprets attachment theory for CNM
relationships, and provides a roadmap for people in CNM
relationships who want to establish emotionally intimate and
securely attached relationships with multiple partners. One of the
most important insights from Fern’s delightful book is that secure
attachment is a product of relationship experiences rather than
relationship.’
*Dr Elisabeth Sheff, author of The Polyamorists Next Door,
Stories from the Polycule, When Someone You Love is
Polyamorous, and Children in Polyamorous
Families*
Praise for Polysecure: ‘Polysecure is likely to become for people
interested in polyamory, what Love Languages is for understanding
romance. It gives people a way to understand how they may be
recreating those old patterns by bringing their own childhood
attachment styles into their adult relationships. And even more
importantly, it offers concrete skills for how to use this
knowledge to create healthier, more satisfying, and secure
relationship dynamics.’
*Max Rivers, intimacy coach and author of Loving Conflict: how
conflict is really your relationship trying to go deeper*
Praise for Polysecure: ‘An extremely helpful addition to the
literature on consensual non-monogamy, and the first self-help book
to focus on applying attachment theory to non-monogamous
relationships. Taking the reader by the hand, Jessica Fern explains
how perfectly secure attachment styles are rare, and how all of us
can usefully work with our attachment issues, whatever our way of
doing relationships. Weaving together research findings with
therapeutic literature and personal experience, Fern does an
excellent job of challenging the popular view that non-monogamous
people are more likely than anyone else to struggle with
attachment. She presents an extremely helpful model locating our
relationship patterns within our wider culture and community as
well as within our family background and relationship experiences.
The notion of openly discussing whether we want an attachment-based
partnership or not is worth the price of the book all by itself, as
is the chapter on developing a secure attachment with yourself.
This is gold!’
*Dr Meg-John Barker, author of Rewriting the Rules: an anti
self-help guide to love, sex and relationships*
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