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Compersion


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Affinity Attachment BondingCasualCohabitation Compersion ConcubinageCourtshipDivorceDower, dowry and bride priceFriendshipFamilyHusbandInfatuationIntimacyJealousyLimerenceLoveMarriageMonogamyNonmonogamy Office romance PassionPartnerPederastyPolyamoryPolygamy Platonic love Psychology of monogamyRelationship abuseRomanceSexualitySeparationWeddingWidowhoodWife

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Emotions
Basic

Anger
Fear
Sadness
Happiness
Disgust
Interest

Others

Acceptance
Affection
Aggression
Ambivalence
Annoyance
Apathy
Anxiety
Boredom
Compassion
Compersion
Confusion
Contempt
Curiosity
Depression
Disappointment
Doubt
Ecstasy
Empathy
Envy
Embarrassment
Euphoria
Forgiveness
Frustration
Gratitude
Grief
Guilt
Hatred
Hope
Horror
Hostility
Homesickness
Hunger
Hysteria
Jealousy
Loneliness
Paranoia
Pity
Pleasure
Pride
Rage
Regret
Remorse
Revenge
Shame
Suffering
Surprise
Sympathy
Vanity

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Compersion is a term used by practitioners of polyamory or swingers to describe the experience of taking pleasure when one\'s partner is with another person. It was originally coined by the Kerista Commune in San FranciscoPolyamory Society Glossary. Retrieved on 2006-12-26. (or possibly by the ZEGG community in Germany)PostNuke powered Website which practiced polyfidelity, and has since been adopted throughout the culture of polyamory. The term is often expressed as "the opposite of jealousy", since that term is used to describe one\'s pain at a lover\'s experiences with others.

Contents

Formal definitions

  • PolyOz define compersion as "the positive feelings one gets when a lover is enjoying another relationship. Sometimes called the opposite or flip side of jealousy." They comment that compersion can coexist with jealous feelings.
  • The Polyamory society defines compersion to be "the feeling of taking joy in the joy that others you love share among themselves, especially taking joy in the knowledge that your beloveds are expressing their love for one another."

Related terms

The adjective frubbly and the noun frubbles are sometimes used, in the poly community in the United Kingdom and the United States, to describe the feeling of compersion.Alexander, Steven. "Free love gets a fit of the wibbles", Guardian Unlimited, 2005-04-04. Retrieved on 2006-07-05.  These terms are more suited to cheerful, light-hearted conversation, and they are more grammatically versatile, for example: "I\'m feeling all frubbly" and "Their relationship fills me with frubbles".

References

See also

External links

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