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If you consider single-mate lovin’ a no-go, you may require an education in non-monogamy. It’s the latest sexual approach — or the oldest. Either way, Ithaca College recently assisted those whose mouths water for the entree of a relationship with the side dish of others’ unmentionables. After attending a scruples-based seminar, students were presumably primed to spread themselves thinly but thoughtfully.
On April 17th, the New York school posted to Instagram as follows:
Ethical Non-Monogamy
Join LGBTQ Center Director Crissi for a workshop that will cover the basics: what makes it ethical, how to communicate about it, how to find other non-monogamous folks, and more.
Exceptionally sex-friendly fellas and felines frequently need out of a jam:
Even in the queer community, there is often a default assumption that relationships will be monogamous… That works for a lot of people, but what if [it’s] not your jam? Welcome to the wide world of ethical non-monogamy!
Concerning the lecture’s locale, Ithaca’s LGBTQ Center was founded in 1999 on three ideas: the value of “sexual and gender diversity,” the right to services that embrace such, and the pursuit of social justice. The Center appears to be co-run by someone named Lee — a multiracial “non-binary trans educator.” At Cornell University, “they/them” studied “queer pop music and trans vocal practices.”