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Feel Secure in Yourself

A Guidebook for LGBTQIA+ People and Those with a Different Label or No Label

A. Lee Beckstead, private practice Jacks Cheng, counseling psychologist Sulaimon Giwa Mark Yarhouse

$58.99

Paperback

Forthcoming
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English
Rowman & Littlefield
02 July 2024
This guidebook is designed to increase readers’ personal resilience, self-acceptance, and growth from minority stress. Readers will be encouraged to clarify their beliefs and improve their relationship with themselves. Conflicts can be resolved as readers develop knowledge of themselves and others and consider resilient ways of experiencing sexual/gender diversity. Those who want a stronger sense of themselves before making important life decisions will benefit from reading this guidebook to develop self-awareness, self-value, and self-direction.

The LGBTQIA+ Peacemaking Book Project offers two guidebooks, Feel Secure in Yourself and Relate to Others with Confidence, published by Rowman & Littlefield, and twelve e-resources self-published by each set of chapter coauthors. Each chapter has 4-15 coauthors, with differing and sometimes politically opposing viewpoints, who contributed their ideas and skills regarding the chapter topic. Over 120 scholars, clinicians, and/or community leaders contributed to this project. Their reason for this collaboration was to find common ground, reduce prejudice, and improve LGBTQIA+ health and self-development for a wide range of readers.

These resources are written for the general public and can be used by academics, clinicians, researchers, religious leaders, parents, and other providers. They are for conservatives and progressives who want to learn updated and integrated ideas and skills about sexuality, gender, race/ethnicity, faith/purpose of life, emotional health, resilience, and relationships.

Overall, this book project is a social experiment of bridge-building and hope to empower readers with identity development and skill development and reduce the side-taking that impairs growth. We hope readers can resolve more conflicts personally and socially and experience more peace. Especially in these divisive times, this book project may serve as an inspiration for other projects.

Edited by:   , , , , ,
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9781538190418
ISBN 10:   1538190419
Series:   Diverse Sexualities, Genders, and Relationships
Pages:   198
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

About the Editors Lee Beckstead (he/him), PhD, is a psychologist in private practice in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is White-Peruvian, gay, cisgender, currently nondisabled, and spiritual with a Latter-day Saints upbringing. Jacks Cheng, PhD, EdM, [tā [他他], he, they] is a licensed psychologist in public service in New York City. Tā is a queer migrant of Taiwanese heritage to Canada and the U.S. Dr. Sulaimon Giwa (he/him/his) is an associate professor and interim dean of social work at Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada. Sulaimon is a scholar-activist who self-identifies as Black, Muslim, and gay. Mark Yarhouse, PsyD, is the Dr. Arthur P. Rech and Mrs. Jean May Rech Professor of Psychology at Wheaton College, where he directs the Sexual & Gender Identity Institute. Iva Žegura (she, her) clin. psych., mag. psych. is a pioneer in establishing LGBTAIQ+ affirmative and sensitive practices in Croatia and the Balkans, and also the first open LGBTAIQ+ clinical psychologist in Croatia. She is an associate collaborator of the Department of Psychology at the University of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb and Rijeka, an associate professor of the Department of Psychology University of Split, Graduate Study in Nursing at Medical Scholl University of Zagreb, IGW Zagreb, Bernays. Currently, she holds the position of EPATH president-elect. She is a white, European cisgender woman. Contributors R.A., Lee Beckstead, Jenna Brownfield, Pichit Buspavanich, Nate Cannon, Marty A. Cooper, Edward (Ward) B. Davis, Janet B. Dean, Jeannie DiClementi, Weston V. Donaldson, Samuel Eshleman Latimer, Alejandro Gepp Torres, Sulaimon Giwa, Debra Harley, Heather Hoffmann, Helen Harris, Tekulvē Jackson-Vann, Jeanna Jacobsen, Tyler Lefevor, S.N.M., Candice Metzler, Elizabeth Morgan, Matthew Nielson, Annelise Parkes Murphy, Jeff Paulez, Eduardo Peres, Kristina Pham, Neo Samas, Katina Sawyer, Zabir D. Shaekhov, Steve Stratton, Dr. Alex Toft, Lauren Wadsworth

Reviews for Feel Secure in Yourself: A Guidebook for LGBTQIA+ People and Those with a Different Label or No Label

An important resource for understanding more about gender and sexual orientation. --Anthony F. Bogaert, Brock University; author of Understanding Asexuality I applaud the clinicians, researchers, and community leaders who held divergent viewpoints but came together to produce Feel Secure in Yourself: A Guidebook for LGBTQIA+ People and Those with a Different Label or No Label. Their contribution to common-ground ideas about sexuality, gender, race, ethnicity, faith and purpose of life, emotional health, resilience, and relationships will benefit readers who are also committed to collaboration, heterodoxy, and truth-seeking. --Zander Keig, author of A Third Space: A Nonconformist's Guide to the Universe; host of The Umbrella Hour podcast This is an exceptionally thorough and detailed book aimed at supporting people across the LGBTQ community and even those who feel they sit outside it. The text particularly embraces the challenges of holding different attitudes towards faith, religion, and sexuality and so will be helpful for those who feel unable or unwilling to come out. --Dominic Davies, founder of Pink Therapy; fellow, National Council of Psychotherapists, UK This is a book for those interested in making peace across different views. It is, in itself, an effort at peacemaking across differences in values and ideas about LGBTQIA+. Grounded in research and including over a hundred contributors, this book will make a contribution to scholarly literature, clinical practice, and individual readers. --Jenell Paris, professor of Anthropology and Sociology, Messiah University


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