Terrific Not Terrifying: Support the Internet and Being Bisexual

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Actress Evan Rachel Wood attends 'The Ides Of March' premiere during the 68th Venice Film Festival at Palazzo del Cinema on August 31, 2011 in Venice, Italy.

In a recent  interview Evan Rachel Wood talked about how as a child her bisexuality ”terrified” her. This I can relate to  really well. The strange feeling you are different then everyone else, but not having a word for it is really terrifying. You may have a word for same sex attractions but not often one for what you feel. Even growing up in a gay and lesbian friendly environment didn’t mean that Wood knew about bisexuality she mentions in her interview.This content is for members only.

It wasn’t until she was older kid and “I didn’t even know bisexuality was a thing until I heard actress Fairuza Balk talk about it when I was a kid. I was like: ‘Oh my God, you can like both—and that’s OK.’ It was revelation.” She tells Marie Claire magazine.

Knowledge can make all the difference in the world. It can mean the difference between isolation and community and in the most extreme cases, like in cases of bullying it can mean the difference between life and death. Thankfully we are now in an age where younger and younger people have access to scores of information on the internet and things travel from Facebook, to Twitter, to Tumblr and back in what feels like the blink of an eye. Continue reading »

Homecoming Out: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Meet New People.

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[from stock.xchng.com

Even the funniest, most seemingly happy go lucky people can get depressed or anxious. I was feeling terribly down and out for the last few weeks. Recently diagnosed with fibromyalgia, a chronic pain condition I started shutting down, feeling bummed out and isolated especially from any in person bisexual, lesbian gay and transgender (BLGT ) community. The recent Bisexual Invisibility report showed that bisexual people are more likely to feel depressed, lonely and isolated then gay or straight people. The link between these feelings and bisexual invisibility in the larger community (both BLGT and straight) is pretty obvious. Thankfully I have a partner who can see when I’m getting this way and knows what to do. This content is for members only.

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Bisexual Reflections On The Past Year

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(Image Credit:) NYABN.com

It’s that time of year again! Happy Bisexual Pride Day (September 23, but of course you all already knew that). And once again it’s time to reflect on how far the bisexual community has come in the past year, and this past year has been an amazing one!

So where to start? Well for one thing, more celebrities are being open about their bisexuality. Here at Bi Social Network we actually have a bi quote of the week now. More TV shows feature bisexuality as at least some sort of theme (Glee not withstanding). A bisexual contingent was invited to the Bisexual, Lesbian, Gay, and Transgender fundraiser at the white house with the President and First Lady this past July, and our very own site founder Adrienne Williams was invited as part of the bisexual group, and went! We’ve got a weekly radio show, and there is more to come soon. This content is for members only. Continue reading »

Practical Visibility: The Other 340 Days

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As the excitement and festivity of pride season draws to a close what do you do? Fold up your flags, launder you pride shirts, and stare blankly into space wondering, “How do I stay visible NOW?”  Pride is a great time to be ultra-visible, but like Christmas it has to come to an end every year. So how can we proud bisexuals stay visible the other 340 days?  One amazingly easy way to stay visible is through social media like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and blogs. In these spaces you have one hundred percent control of not only your information and how others see you but of the information you share with them.

Most social media websites, whether it’s Facebook, Tumblr, or Twitter have a link sharing feature. Using this you can share relevant bi news and articles and just about anything else your bi-brain can think up! But what if your great aunt Norma and her farmville obsession are on your Facebook friends list? Or maybe you have your boss on your friends list and are afraid that being visible could get you fired? One of the great things social networking does is it allows you to control what, and who you share it with. You can customize settings and in a few seconds Aunt Norma and her virtual cows won’t see the post nor will your boss. But you can still be visible to those you trust. This content is for members only.

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Capital Queer Prom: A Night To Remember

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Evereyone remembers their prom (or sometimes proms, if you go two years in a row). Even if you don’t actually go to it, you remember the time period surrounding it, and the stories of your friends who went. For a lot of bisexual, lesbian, gay and transgender (BLGT) kids, it can be fun, but also bittersweet and confusing. If you get to go with your friends or with a friend, boyfriend or girlfriend as your date, then everything should be fine. But if you are queer in some way, especially if you are not out, then you are either hiding a secret, or possibly feeling that something is missing. I wasn’t out when I went to my two proms. And though I was with someone I was happy with and with a group of friends, proms were some of the rare times I actually thought about my “secret” (bisexuality) and wondered how my proms would have been different if all of the BLGT kids had been allowed to be themselves. I enjoyed going with a boyfriend, but part of me felt like I should have had a second prom and seen what it was like to go with a girl and be in a queer environment. I later learned that there were several kids who were not straight in some way and had wondered the same thing. But no one talked about it too openly; the idea of a “gay prom” was more of a joke than anything else. I remember thinking, why did there have to be a “straight prom” and a “gay prom”? Couldn’t we just have one big prom, and everyone be themselves?

Unfortunately it seems that fifteen years later it’s still hard for BLGT kids and straight kids to have a prom together. While there has been some progress on this front, we as a society have a long way to go. The unfortunate case of Constance McMillen showed this. Last year Constance wanted to take her girlfriend to her prom, and it caused a huge uproar as the school would not allow it. The comments her classmates were writing on facebook were frightening; I had thought homo and biphobia was bad when I was her age, but this was the worst I’d ever seen. I wondered whether kids like Constance would ever get to have a “normal prom”.

It was around then that I heard about Washington DC’s Capital Queer Prom. It had been going on in my area for about five years. It was an event thrown around prom time every year by several BLGT organizations, where the queer community could bring whoever they wanted to prom and be out. Anyone could come; BLGT adults could finally experience prom the way they had wanted it to be, or as in my case, that second prom they’d always wondered about. This content is for members only.

The Revolving Closet Door, Coming Out Bi

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revolving door

The euphemism of the revolving door is often used and interpreted to be derogatory. Simply though, it’s just a fact of life. While some of us may voluntarily slide back into the closet at pragmatic times (just as some homosexuals do), even if we are the loudest and proudest, most in-your-face bisexual alive our sexuality is continuously interpreted dependent on where we are and who we’re with. In effect we are always “coming out.”

Often bisexuals can feel like they’re just moving from one closet to another, very rarely do you ever get out as bisexual. I walk through the mall with my wife, and I’m hetero. She goes home to bed while I grab a drink in Boystown, and I’m gay. There is no implicit bisexual public action save for walking down the street holding hands with someone of each gender. Yes I could wear a snazzy “I go both ways” t-shirt, but that’s what we call explicit. Deep down, I wish people could figure it for themselves without me having to spell it out.

Both ways sign

Just plaster this on everything from your car to your pants, and no one will every question your sexuality again. (credit image: Cassowary via Wikimedia Commons)

Struggling with the decision to come out can be difficult whatever your preference. Fortunately, many homosexuals find solace and support in the queer community, and there are a host of community outreach programs familiar with their problems. At the same time, the queer community’s reaction to bisexuals is highly variable resulting in distrust and frustration, while those same community programs can find themselves incapable of accommodating a bisexual’s unique needs and situations.

I have met fantastically supportive monosexual men and women who not only accepted me and my preferences, but welcomed both me and my wife with genuine friendship. Alternatively, I’ve found myself cornered in the bathroom at a gay bar being interrogated. I’ve had “friends” feign understanding to try and get into my pants, and I’ve had friends who can’t wait to meet the special someone in my life because they assume she must just be so awesome.

In looking for help, when a committed homosexual man or woman decides they want to come out, it’s usually just a matter of dealing with the pain of separation, and going through a divorce or separation process (not that these are easy things to deal with). There are hundreds of experienced and seasoned professionals to help men and women make the difficult transition and offer counseling. On the flip side, bisexuals are rarely contemplating divorce or separation from their spouses when they decide to come out. Most questions involve salvaging a relationship after cheating, or exploring newfound sexuality without losing someone you deeply love. The psychologists and sexologists have only a handful of case studies coupled with barely useful, incidental data from a variety of questionnaires which were usually trying to study something other than bisexual issues.

How do we come out in a way that’s definitive, lasting, and fulfilling? Basically… we don’t. Who we have sex with doesn’t define us, 95% of the people we meet we’ll never see again (yes that’s a made up statistic), and it’s how we live that really makes us fulfilled—not how we’re seen. The dirty secret is even monosexuals of either persuasion will typically go through life with people presuming they are something they’re not. Many straight actors, comedians, and musicians deal with questions about their sexuality on a lifelong basis. Many homosexuals are presumed straight outside of the queer scene, they “pass” without even trying, and when around new people they have to “come out again” just like we do.

For all the other issues our revolving door seems to cause, the solution is action. Refuse to let the crowd of people push you through either in or out. When someone who’s only been talking to you for ten minutes makes the declaration, “You’re not really bi.” Draw attention to how silly it is for them to be making that kind of assumption. Create a space for other bisexuals to feel welcomed. If your community center has a crisis line, offer to take the bisexual calls. Reach out and find those health professionals who are actually experienced with a variety of orientations, so when you or someone you know needs help, there’s somebody to go to. Attend events and functions regardless of target audience, and rather than feeling like you need to shove your preference in everyone’s face, be unashamed and genuine about who you are when those tricky questions come up. If it’s not a big deal to you, it likely won’t be a big deal to anyone else, and you won’t have to worry about coming out or going back in—you’ll just be you.

Starting A Bisexual Revolution

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President Obama signs DADT repeal (Image Credit:) Wikimedia.com/Jatkins

“When I picketed for Welfare Mother’s Rights, and against the enforced sterilization of young black girls, when I fought institutionalized racism in the New York City schools, I was a black lesbian. But you did not know it because we did not identify ourselves, so now you can say that black lesbians and gay men have nothing to do with the struggles of the Black Nation.” ~~ Audre Lorde (1934-92) from her essay entitled  I Am Your Sister

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The Acceptance of Bi Confidence

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Credit: The Tudors (Showtime.com)

I remember a story about a man who wanted to be the king of the world.  This man, we will call him Harry, believed from a very young age that he would one day be famous.  So famous that when he walked down the street, there would be a multitude chanting his name and demanding he tell them what he wanted so they could fulfil his every wish. Sadly, this desire was never to be. You see, Harry lacked the one ingredient that was needed in order to be king; he lacked the confidence to believe he was a king whether or not the people demanded he act like it.

Sometimes we find ourselves backed into a corner with no way out.  When we are placed in this situation, we may resort to the primal instincts of fight or flight, and in some cases, both may be the right answer. The trouble is which right answer will get you out of the predicament that has so cleverly snared you?  Left or right, up or down, fight or….. You get the picture.  What is the right answer, which do I chose? Continue reading »

The Missing “Hetero-Privilege Card”

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(Image Credit:) Wikimedia.com/Bazi

After the horrific events of the last couple of weeks, where BLGT people committed suicide due to severe bullying, this past week there was yet another incidence of bullying, as well as an article about a past suicide by a bisexual victim of bullying. In the bullying incident, a bisexual teenager got beat up in public and was helped out by a kind-hearted woman.  In the article about the suicide, a mother talked about how her bisexual son committed suicide 15 years ago due to being the victim of a hate crime (see Bisexual Teen’s Mother: “He Saw No Hope, So He Chose To End His Life”). This time even the media actually reported the victim as “bisexual” (so did the witness) as opposed to “gay.” Good step forward—now if only bisexual victims were identified every time–and not 15 years later!

When I saw this my first thought was the same one I always get when I hear about incidents like these: “So where’s that famous “hetero-privilege” we bisexuals are supposed to have? Maybe it temporarily left this poor kid on that day?” Almost every week I hear about some kind of biphobia—whether it is reported through articles like The Bully And The Geek, A Personal Journey, other bi media, or bisexual friends and acquaintances—coming from both the straight and gay communities and it seems almost constant lately. Many bisexual people I’ve talked seem to also be missing their “hetero-privilege card”. Perhaps they left it at home?  Why is it that when I read The Heterosexual Privilege Checklist,–I can’t respond yes to one single thing?

I suppose it’s possible that my ex religious fanatic friend forgot about my hetero-privilege when she wrote in great detail on facebook about how I was going to burn in hell. I was dating a guy at the time, so my hetero-privilege really should have been there; however it seems like contrary to what biphobic people in the BLGT community say, who you are actually with doesn’t seem to protect you much from bigotry if you still admit to being bisexual. Maybe when my friends got attacked leaving a Women Seeking Women event at night, they had dropped their hetero-privilege somewhere? It seems John Terry and August Provost also dropped theirs right before they were murdered too. Celebrities who come out as bisexual don’t seem to have picked up theirs either; as they face mostly ridicule.

So how come this so called “privilege”, that we bisexuals are supposed to have is so invisible? I’ve written before about Bisexuals And The Hetero-Privilege Myth, and now I’ll say it again: maybe that answer is that this privilege is invisible because it doesn’t exist! If we stay in the closet and pretend to be straight, we get the same “privilege” a gay person gets if he or she stays in the closet. Yet if we come out, in addition to people hating on us for liking the same sex, we have people hating on us for liking the opposite sex too! In fact sometimes the pressure to prove we are really and truly “queer” can be so bad, that we wind up rejecting viable opposite sex partners, as is so well explained by Raspberry Mousse Media. If this is so called “privilege”, please lead me to the line where I can gladly get rid of it! If any biphobic people are reading this, I challenge you to show me where my “hetero-privilege” is hiding.

It’s great to see that gay celebrities are getting involved with things like the It Gets Better campaign. I totally support this and as bisexuals we all should. However, we also need to speak out about the fact that this campaign is incomplete—Dan Savage constantly talks about “gay and lesbian” bullying; once again, except for the occasional offhand “GLBT” reference, it’s as if bisexual and transgender people don’t exist, nor do they face bullying. Unfortunately this is not surprising considering his past stated views about the bisexual community, which are very well explained here: Dan Savage, ‘It Gets Better’: The Mel Gibson Of Bisexuality.

Ironically we seem to face quite a variety of bullying! Luckily Savage is not the only voice; I’m sure there definitely are gay and lesbian allies in the campaign who would welcome us. However, another idea might be the bisexual community considering having its own type of campaign like this—specifically geared towards bisexuals. I can think of several young bisexuals who definitely need to hear that it will get at least somewhat better for them too; this could help them to not be afraid; to seek help if necessary, and to stay true to who they are.

‘I Am Visible’ Campaign Kicks Off Store for Bisexual Pride Day, Sept 23

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'I am Visible' Campaign Kicks off September 23

As we approach Bisexual Pride Day on September 23 and the anticipated year long “I Am Visible’ Campaign. I wanted everyone to have the opportunity to purchase a bisexual product in time for our special event.

If you order now, you will be able to show your pride by supporting bisexual businesses and helping the world understand that we are everywhere!

It’s time we all stepped out proudly—what better day than, i.e., Bisexual Day?

In the next up coming days, we will have more bisexual colors in the traditional Purple, Blue and Pink. Keep checking back for more styles and the bi colors you love to wear. All products will help Bi Social Network grow as we move forward—not only in this campaign, but with more writers, content, more events, programs and ways to showcase to the world that bisexuals really are visible all around you! Bi Social Network is committed to improving the lives of bisexuals in all walks of life by education, entertainment, social events and empowerment. We heard you, now lets show the world that we want our lives out there in front of all.

Stay tuned for more updates and great surprises! Now go on and shop!

I am Visible-purple Hoodie (Men) shirt
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I am Visible White Hoodie (women) shirt
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