Slow Pleasure: Explore Your Pleasure Spectrum
By (Author) Euphemia Russell
Hardie Grant Books
Hardie Grant Books
30th March 2022
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Dating, relationships, living together and marriage: advice and issues
Mind, body, spirit: meditation and visualization
152.42
Hardback
224
Width 138mm, Height 190mm, Spine 26mm
488g
Slow Pleasureis a practical and philosophical exploration of pleasure, teaching you how to claim, prioritise and integrate pleasure into your daily life.
We live in a world of breakneck speed and it can be intimidating and nearly impossible to slow down. In this crisis of pace, we are often disembodied, disconnected, and forget that we even live in a body!
In this beautiful book, pleasure coach and educator Euphemia Russell (they/them) teaches us that, despite our collective challenges, we can cultivate pleasure and connection. Starting with the philosophy of pleasure, Euphemia deepens your understanding and then helps you interrogate what is impeding your ability to feel the whole pleasure spectrum. Slow Pleasure will help you establish a pleasure practice of your own, expand your pleasure dial, help you understand your desires and teach you how to continue to explore the depths and boundaries of your pleasure.
Woven throughout the book are reflection questions and pleasure practices that bring you back into your body, make you slow down to listen to yourself, and help you consciously begin to prioritise your pleasure.
Slow Pleasure teaches us that pleasure goes way beyond sex and should be cultivated and celebrated in every moment.
Euphemia Russell is a Pleasure Educator and founder of I Wish You Knew, based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Theyre dedicated to resourcing people with practical pleasure and embodiment tools through coaching, writing, and facilitation. Their approach is based on the fundamental conviction that pleasure is regenerative and essential to health, not just a frivolous indulgence that you supposedly dont deserve. They gently support others to investigate inherited beliefs and 'deshamifying', self-regulation and embodiment, kinky explorative techniques, pain and trauma, and communication with ones self and others. With a background in Community Development, they centre inclusivity, representation, and accessibility in their work.