stef's rants: #3 in a series
This one was also suggested by
snippy:
What does bisexual mean to you, and how do I figure out if I am bisexual? (Not necessarily me specifically, that is.)
Bisexual means to me being sexually and/or romantically attracted to people of more than one sex. I find it irritating that a lot of people who are sexually attracted to more than one sex won't use the label, but I can also see various reasons why this comes about, both reasons I approve of (they are concerned about coopting a label that they think doesn't belong to them and has a frisson of coolness) and reasons I don't (they don't want the negative associations that come with the label; they want to pass and don't care whether that decreases the visibility of bisexual people).
That said, how I began figuring out I was bisexual was by realizing that I fell in love with other women, rather than realizing that I was sexually attracted to other women. See, I knew I found women physically attractive, but I thought all women felt that way, especially given the ubiquitous seductive images of women in all the media directed at women. I had to start openly discussing my attraction to other women in sexual and romantic terms, before I heard some heterosexual women say, "Well, no, I don't feel physically attracted toward other women, and I react to the media images by wanting to be like her, not by wanting to touch her." (I expect they were saying that because they were worried I was coming on to them.)
The other part of figuring out I was bisexual was accepting that I was really attracted to people of more than one sex, even though there were differences in how that attraction manifested itself toward people of different genders, and that I wasn't going to grow up and make up my mind. (I lived on the East Coast in the early 80s and felt a lot of pressure to identify as either het or gay; I felt bi wasn't a politically correct option; I didn't completely come out as bi until I came to San Francisco.)
I dunno if this has a lot to do with how other people figure out they're bi.
cyan_blue recently posted an article she had written about it (or was it notes for a lecture?) and it sounds like there are some points of commonality, especially the "not figuring it out as early as het and gay people do" (I was 23 or so when I first suspected it and 29 when I finished coming out).
What does bisexual mean to you, and how do I figure out if I am bisexual? (Not necessarily me specifically, that is.)
Bisexual means to me being sexually and/or romantically attracted to people of more than one sex. I find it irritating that a lot of people who are sexually attracted to more than one sex won't use the label, but I can also see various reasons why this comes about, both reasons I approve of (they are concerned about coopting a label that they think doesn't belong to them and has a frisson of coolness) and reasons I don't (they don't want the negative associations that come with the label; they want to pass and don't care whether that decreases the visibility of bisexual people).
That said, how I began figuring out I was bisexual was by realizing that I fell in love with other women, rather than realizing that I was sexually attracted to other women. See, I knew I found women physically attractive, but I thought all women felt that way, especially given the ubiquitous seductive images of women in all the media directed at women. I had to start openly discussing my attraction to other women in sexual and romantic terms, before I heard some heterosexual women say, "Well, no, I don't feel physically attracted toward other women, and I react to the media images by wanting to be like her, not by wanting to touch her." (I expect they were saying that because they were worried I was coming on to them.)
The other part of figuring out I was bisexual was accepting that I was really attracted to people of more than one sex, even though there were differences in how that attraction manifested itself toward people of different genders, and that I wasn't going to grow up and make up my mind. (I lived on the East Coast in the early 80s and felt a lot of pressure to identify as either het or gay; I felt bi wasn't a politically correct option; I didn't completely come out as bi until I came to San Francisco.)
I dunno if this has a lot to do with how other people figure out they're bi.
no subject
The tricky thing for me is where to define the threshold for sexual attraction (or, for that matter, romantic attraction). I definitely experience "want to touch her" sometimes, but I'm often not clear on whether the touch I desire is sexual in nature--maybe I just want to touch her the way I want to touch a silk scarf--or even to what extent the desire is genuine and not just something I've talked myself into thinking I feel. (This begs the question of why I'd talk myself into it, I know; I think there exists a semi-plausible answer, but it'd be a heck of a digression.) For various reasons, I'm not that likely to learn anything more about my attractions any time soon, so I label myself bisexual only hesitantly; I usually prefer to figure I just don't really know what my orientation is.
no subject
That makes sense. I'm not irritated by people who avoid the label because they aren't sure (although I also don't think people have to "have experience" before they "get" to label themselves bisexual). I'm irritated by people who do know, and use a misleading label.
(Not that I think anyone should be concerned about my irritation anyway. :-)