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Q&A ON BISEXUALITY:

 

EXAMINING STEREOTYPES AND MISCONCEPTIONS

Q: What is bisexuality?

A: Bisexuality is the capacity for physical, romantic and/or emotional attraction to more than one gender. A bisexual identity affirms a reality beyond dualistic categories of sexual orientation and challenges the privileging of single-gender orientation.

Q. Do bisexuals have to have partners of both genders to be satisfied?

A: Bisexuality is the potential--not the requirement--for involvement with more than one gender. This involvement may mean sexually, emotionally, in reality, or in fantasy. Some bisexuals may have concurrent partners; others may relate to different genders at various time periods. Most bisexuals do not have to be involved with more than one gender at a time in order to feel fulfilled.

Q: Aren't bisexuals "oversexed"?

A: Attraction does not necessitate acting on every desire. Just as there is a range of behaviors within heterosexual society and the lesbian and gay communities, there is also a range within the bisexual community. Some have one partner; some choose to be partnerless, some have multiple partners. The bisexual population has the same variety of sexual activity as other groups.

Q: Can bisexuals form long-term committed relationships?

A: Bisexuality is a sexual orientation. It is independent of the lifestyle choice to be monogamous or polyamorous. Bisexuals are as capable as anyone of making long-term relationship commitments. Bisexuals live a variety of lifestyles, as do gays, lesbians and heterosexuals.

Q: Isn't calling oneself bisexual just a phase a person goes through because he or she is afraid to "come out" as lesbian or gay?

A: Some people do go through a transitional period of bisexuality on their way to adopting a lesbian, gay or heterosexual identity. For many others, bisexuality remains a long term orientation. In fact, researchers are finding that homo sexuality and heterosexuality are often transitional phases in the coming-out process for bisexual people.

Q: Aren't bisexuals just "confused"?

A: It is natural for bisexuals, gays and lesbians to go through a period of confusion in the coming-out process. Historically society has stigmatized same-gender attractions and denied the possibility of a bisexual orientation. In this situation, confusion is an understandable reaction until on is able to come out and find a supportive environment. Most bisexuals are absolutely clear about their sexual orientation.

Q: Do people choose to be bisexual?

A: For bisexuals the choice is to live openly and honestly or to be silenced by the invisibility of the closet. No one really knows the origins of sexual orientation, including bisexuality. However, whether it is biologically determined or not, sexual orientation should not determine one's access to full participation in society.

Q: Do bisexuals want "special rights"?

A: Bisexuals want to live their lives without the threat of discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodation. To ensure their basic civil rights, bisexuals are seeking equal protection under the law.

Q: Do bisexuals spread AIDS?

A: Bisexuals have been scapegoated by people who thing of AIDS as a "gay disease." The fact is, risky behaviors spread HIV, not someone's sexual identity. HIV is transmitted when the body fluids of an infected person (e.g. blood, semen, vaginal fluids, or breast milk) enter someone else's body. Practicing safer sex and not sharing injection drug paraphernalia is important for everyone--bisexual, heterosexual, lesbian or gay--who is interested in stopping the spread of AIDS.

Q: Should the lesbian and gay communities be inclusive of bisexuals?

A: Bisexuals are part of the generic definition of gay in the same way that lesbians are (see Don Clark's Loving Someone Gay). Because heterosexuals lump them all together, bisexuals encounter the same kinds of harassment and discrimination as gays, lesbians and transgender people. Bisexuals lose their jobs, their homes and their children, and are discharged from the military when they are honest about their sexual orientation. Bisexuals have always been a part of as well as apart from the lesbian and gay communities. It is important that bisexuals are included to accurately describe the larger gay community.

Q: When the going gets tough, won't bisexuals hide in the heterosexual community? Don't bisexuals dump their same-gender partners for different-gender partners to pass as straight?

A: People leave relationships for all kinds of reasons, not just the gender of their partner. Anyone unable to make a commitment to a relationship may use a person of any gender to leave it. To "pass" for straight and deny one's bisexuality is just as painful and damaging for bisexuals as it is for gays and lesbians to stay in or re-enter the closet. Bisexuals are not heterosexual.

Q: Do some bisexuals identify as heterosexual? What about lesbian or gay?

A: All human sexuality studies have found that there is a notable disparity between what people do (sexual behavior) and what people call themselves (sexual identity). Many people are unaware that identifying as bisexual is even an option. (Significantly, no studies have measured the incidence of bisexual feelings and fantasies that have not been acted upon.) Many bisexually behaving people do not identify as bisexual for a number of reasons including fear of discrimination and social stigmatization from both heterosexual society and the lesbian and gay communities.