Actions Panel
Polydays: Polyamory And The Holidays
Join us for this Canada-wide, by-donation* discussion on being polyamorous during the holiday season! [*free for CPAA members]
When and where
Date and time
Location
Online
Refund Policy
About this event
It's December and that means HOLIDAY SEASON.
For many this season can be both busy and stressful. Being in multiple relationships can offer more reprieve from the stress, but it can also sometimes contribute to it with so many questions, like:
- Who do you bring as your "plus one" to the office party, and how do you tell the partner you aren't taking?
- Can you bring all your partners to that annual family dinner, and if so, how will you address Uncle Kevin's insistence that it's "just a phase"?
- How can you creatively include your whole polycule in festive celebrations and gift exchanges?
JOIN US for this online discussion to explore these questions, vent about the frustrations of the season, and share about the joys when things work great!
This discussion will be co-facilitated by Mel and Bram, Board members of the CPAA.
ADMISSION:
By donation, suggested donation $5-$20, no one turned away for lack of funds.
Free for CPAA Members.
Accessibility Information
Closed captioning will be provided via integrated zoom captions.
Please email us info@polyadvocy.ca if you have accessibility needs that we can support you with.
About the CPAA
The Canadian Polyamory Advocacy Association (or CPAA) is a volunteer run nonprofit society, incorporated in the province of British Columbia, Canada. We advocate on behalf of Canadians who practice polyamory, promoting legal, social, government, and institutional acceptance and support of polyamory, and advances the interests of the Canadian polyamorous community generally. Learn more about us here.
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
We hold a vision of polyamorous community supportive of compassionate social structures that welcome and engage different voices, backgrounds, lived experiences, physical abilities, mental health statuses, whilst recognising that no community can be truly inclusive of everyone, and that those who are ableist, racist, homophobic, and/or transphobic may struggle to feel included unless they are willing to examine their beliefs.