
Lesbian Couples and Consensual Non-Monogamy: A Real Guide
Open, poly, and queer ENM through a lesbian-feminist lens — naming structures, addressing bi-erasure, and managing small-community overlap with care.
Articles on consensual non-monogamy in ongoing romantic partnerships.

Open, poly, and queer ENM through a lesbian-feminist lens — naming structures, addressing bi-erasure, and managing small-community overlap with care.

How gay and bi men navigate the swinger lifestyle — MM clubs, monogamish agreements, bi-friendly venues, and PrEP-era health practice for open couples.

Swinger couples often build deeper friendships and more honest communication than the culture assumes. How long-term connections actually form in the lifestyle.

Hotwifing and cuckolding look similar from outside — a partner engages with a third while the other is aware — but emotional dynamics differ. A clear breakdown.

An editorial look at why some couples choose consensual non-monogamy to rekindle erotic novelty, and the communication requirements that matter most here.

Swinger couples have voluntary agreed to step outside of their monogamous partnership when they choose to explore the lifestyle. While the...

A cuckquean arrangement works when the woman's own desire drives it. This guide covers agency, partner consent, F/F play, safer sex, and aftercare for all.

Five research-grounded facts about the swinger community that most outsiders miss — who swingers actually are, how they communicate, and what studies show.

Open relationships vs. monogamy — comparing both structures honestly to help you and your partner decide what fits your life, values, and long-term goals.

Balancing swinging with everyday professional and family life is simpler than most newcomers expect. Discretion and communication routines do the work.

For couples navigating a sexless stretch, swinging is one honest, consent-based option — alongside therapy — for rekindling desire and rebuilding connection.

A research-informed look at whether the swinger lifestyle is healthy for relationships, with the honest caveat that it is not a repair tool for struggling ones.