It seems my initial book review stirred up some concerns about the larger public’s confounding bisexuality and polyamory. Clearly they are two different things, but outside of our community people can have some—shall we say—strange ideas about bisexuals. What is important is not merely what others think of us but how we react to those perceptions.
Whether we like it or not, we have been saddled with the image of bisexuals as voracious sexual predators, incapable of moderation and commitment. It is not as if this fate has escaped other groups, for example consider the image of the black male sexuality in US society. The truth about the sexuality of others is almost irrelevant because the puritanical society in which we live projects its neuroses and desires upon that Other. And we are (one of ) the Other(s).




Naturally the two do intersect sometimes, but that is true of people of all orientations, not just bisexuals. Yet, we wouldn’t think to just assume that a gay or a straight person is seeing more than one person based solely on their orientation. Also, people who really are in polyamorous relationships choose to engage in them with the consent of all parties, not because they want to cheat and can’t control their attractions. They also do not view it as a negative thing to be hidden, so chances are if you befriend a bisexual person and they don’t tell you about being in a relationship with more than one person—it means they are not, and you shouldn’t assume they are unless told otherwise. A major stereotype that needs to be broken is that liking more than one gender makes one any more likely to cheat or be deceitful in relationships than liking just one gender does.