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Small conflicts do not usually explode because the issue is huge. They explode because the rules are unclear: when to talk, how to disagree, what counts as respect, and how you come back together after a sharp moment. The Anti-Drama Manual by Kaia Solander is a practical guide to building calm relationships through simple, usable agreements that stop repeated fights before they gather momentum.
You will learn communication rules that reduce escalation without demanding perfect self-control, plus emotional regulation skills designed for real life (tired evenings, busy mornings, and misread messages). The book shows how assumption checking can replace mind-reading, why timing hard talks matters more than winning the argument, and how boundary setting works best when it is clear, mutual, and consistently followed through. When things do go wrong, you will have a straightforward repair conversation structure to clean up quickly, reduce resentment, and rebuild safety.
This is for partners, friends, co-parents, housemates, and anyone who is done with drama but still wants closeness. If you are tired of circular arguments, fairness debates that never end, or peace that only lasts until the next trigger, this manual gives you a calm framework: fewer blow-ups, faster repairs, and relationship agreements you can actually keep. It is not about being quiet, passive, or endlessly patient. It is about being clear, kind, and consistent enough that connection becomes the default.

The Anti-Drama Manual

SKU: 9789377780760
$25.99 Regular Price
$20.45Sale Price
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  • Kaia Solander writes for people who want their relationships to feel steadier in real life than they look on paper. Her work is grounded in a simple belief: most conflict is not a sign of failure, but a sign that two people are running different rules at the same time. She is drawn to the practical edge of emotional life, where a small change in timing, wording, or follow-through can prevent a needless spiral and make kindness easier to access. Over the years, Kaia has learned as much from ordinary conversations as from any formal setting: listening to friends debrief a hard week, watching families negotiate holidays, noticing how couples recover (or do not) after a sharp exchange, and paying attention to what people do when they are tired, stressed, or afraid of being dismissed. She has a particular respect for repair, the quiet craft of returning after a rupture and making things right without theatre. A subtle thread in her approach comes from older traditions of mending and making do: the idea that you do not throw away what matters because it has a crack, you learn how to reinforce it. In a culture that can reward hot takes and heightened reactions, Kaia’s mission is to make calm feel strong, specific, and doable, one clear agreement at a time.

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