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#21
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Zerbie - you have once again proven to be an invaluable resouce for me, helping, as I form new approaches & ideas, to bounce ideas back & help me in clarifying a position. I would be interested in your take on a rewrite, which I have posted in the tridd (East Texas) forums here:
http://tridd.freeforums.org/viewtopic.php?t=101 (scroll down to "Volume 2"). I am happy also to learn more about many issues faced by bisexuals that I hadn't really considered before, and now more clearly understand how my remarks were initially taken as insensitive. I assure you, however, that my intent was pure. The phenomenon, interestingly highlighted by the current Senator Craig debacle, is amazing to me in almost every respect... The fact that you can be arrested in an airport for sliding your foot to near the adjacent stall reeks of a "witch hunt." And his repeated insistence that "I am not gay," only serves to make it's antithesis (I AM gay) some kind of enormous indictment. Sen Craig displays all of the dynamics of the conservative bisexual antigay activist I had originally proposed, from being a vocal spokesman against gay rights right down to the apparent embattlement against his own demons (see the Idaho Statesmen article at: http://www.idahostatesman.com/1264/story/144047.html I'm just wondering if our understanding of vehement opposition as being an expression of angst among conservative bisexuals might help form an approach in dealing with them. How would we approach the "Focus on the Family" group, for example, armed with the foreknowledge that their extreme bigotry had, at its roots, a basis in their leaders' and members' own sexual orientation?
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-- "You must be the change you wish to see in the world." -- Mohandas Gandhi
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#22
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There was a point when I actually called myself (to myself) bisexual. I'll take a coin from the ex-gay bank to try and splain. "Gender confusion." I think that's a real phenomenom, but the ex-gay movement has turned it topsy-turvy. That is to say, by taking a real orientation ("gay") and trying to straighten it out, they've caused a great deal of confusion. I know this first hand, as you know, because up until a year and a half ago I believed they were right. So, it's pretty logical that, at this early juncture, I'm still figuring some things out. I'm just being very honest. I have spent my entire life married to a woman, after all, so I have to be a little suspicious that I might just be a closeted bisexual . Still, I do currently identify as "gay" because it seems a pretty safe bet. My wife is the only woman I have ever been with, heck, she's the only woman I ever kissed. My biggest clue, insight, comes from my dream life. When I have 'those' kind of dreams (from the time I started having them as a kid), it's never been with a woman, always a guy. I consider dreams to be where the veil is removed and we can discover what's really there. So, I'm probably not bi, just a mal-adjusted gay.![]() People who are ssa don't just have the ramifications of the closet to deal with. We do all venture forth from the closet. One of the articles of clothing that many of us keep/kept in our closets, for going out in, was/is a straight jacket (i need to copyright that one ).
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#23
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__________________
"I have this terribly archaic notion that art should be about beauty... and passion... and, well, redefining an imperfect world in a perfect way." -- Still Breathing |
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#24
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![]() ![]() I think man on man action is really hot sexy stuff! I think you're the first other girl I've met who thinks so too. So many girls make that "ew" face at the idea of guy on guy, and I DON'T GET IT!! If one is hot, two is hotter, right? Eh. Not to them. Call me weird, again, but some of those movies with boy kissing boy scenes, - ROWR! Oh but, I wouldn't actually ask my friends to let me watch!!!!!!!!!
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#25
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Hey, me too! Oh, wait, that doesn't count, does it?
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Better to light one candle than to curse the darkness. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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#26
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![]() And there's actually a huge pocket of girls who think boy on boy is hot. (Amusingly enough, a large number of them turn out to be lesbians or bisexual themselves. ) You told me you'd never heard of manga (Japanese comics) before, right? There's this entire subsection of manga called "yaoi" that is all about boy on boy. It can go from very tame (a little kissing) to very XXX-rated, and is a huge phenomenon over in Japan and gaining popularity by leaps and bounds in the US, and most of its fans are girls. Careful if you decide to go exploring, though - while some of it is very good, with delicious story-telling, some of it is... just... NOT. ![]() (You'd be better off asking someone more experienced for some recommendations. Not that I know anyone like that. )Also, I dunno if you saw the thread in the General Discussion forum about movies? There's this gorgeous German one called Summer Storm that's just amazing, if a little bit sad. (But kind of explicit in places! )Hee. It's fun to find friends with similar interests... ![]() Oh and Brent? ...You might count. In an honorary sense. Maybe.
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"I have this terribly archaic notion that art should be about beauty... and passion... and, well, redefining an imperfect world in a perfect way." -- Still Breathing |
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#27
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Better to light one candle than to curse the darkness. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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#28
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When I first came out I identified as bisexual, as I have dated both men and women. I found that I prefer women and now identify as lesbian. I actually had to go to therapy to figure out who to identify! how sad is that? I have always identified myself as gay. The looks a person gets in the gay communtiy when they say they are "bi" is amazing. People think you are cheap, slutty and cant be faithful. They think you are confused and want to savor gay relationships and have hetero privelidge. Actually, it is VERY difficult to be bi as you have 2 closets to come out from, no one accepts you and everyone hates you! Bis have a hard time standing up for gay rights as they are often shunned in the gay community. Did you know some lesbians will not date a bi girl cause they dont trust them to not throw them over for a man? Its actually sad. Zerbie, I am so glad you are a vocal part of the community and identify as proud and bi. People do not seem to understand that it is not a choice to be atracted to both sexes, it happens. You fall in love with someone and whatever sex they are does not matter. How much more complete could a human be? To be able to look into both sexes for your soulmate is awesome. We need to understand that sexuality is fluid and we are all along a continum of straight to gay. Some of us are only completely attracted to opposite sex, some only attracted to same sex and the rest fall in between. That scientifically is aproximately 80% of the populace with 10% gay the other 10% straight. |
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#29
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No, bisexuals just don't have the tendancy to limit themselves to one sex or the other to find their soulmates. They dont need to have a relashionship with both sexes at once either to be considered bisexual. I actually think that idea was a hetero mans fantasy and it sounded good to sterotype people with so it spread! |
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#30
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I'm not sure I understand you. I think this is true for some, but not ALL who identify as bisexual. I agree with Zerbie: can't choose attraction, but we can choose what we act on. Research seems to suggest that a very small minority of the population is right in the middle of the Kinsey scale. For some bisexual people, monogamy works, because one falls in love with and commits to a specific partner, rather than to a gender. The attraction to both sexes is always there, but not everyone has to have partners of both sexes.....though certainly some do seem to. Polly |
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#31
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I so got into Queer as Folk when Brian and Justin got it on. It was SO hot I could'nt believe it. I still prefer sex with a woman, but I do so love to look at men! LOL LOL ![]() ![]()
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#32
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Sorry I missed this post Zerbie! no I didn't mean that bi-sexual people can choose who they are attracted to but rather that since they are attracted to both genders they could choose who they had relationships with. So homophobic bisexuals who imagine that their experience is universal also imagine that gay people and straight people have a choice about their partners also.
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#33
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![]() Thank you Tyme, this helps a great deal. ![]() I've been feeling frustrated with parts of this thread where that godawful word "choice" keeps coming back, again and again. I feel like, "Hey I just TOLD you, aren't you listening?" The choice is not over orientation, it's over whether or not to FOLLOW when the orientation leads you down the socially prohibited path. Same choice a gay person has, although with the merciful difference that a bisexual CAN still find an opposite sex partner and be responsive. THAT is the critical difference, and that's where this entire conversation pivots. Troy - the re-write is much better. Thank you. It makes a real difference that you don't let readers think you are universalizing about bisexuals. You are very dear to me: thank you for your re-write and your kind remarks. ![]() Ya know. I love BEING bisexual but I hate TELLING people I'm bisexual. As I said (two years ago?) to Awediot, it's MUCH easier telling straight folk I'm bisexual than it is telling gay folk. I'm scared to death of being rejected by my gay friends and colleagues, so I'm much more likely to stay closeted around them. Can't tell you how many times I've let them label me as straight without clarifying, because I'm afraid they'll change their minds about me if I tell them this tidbit. I've even backed away from using gender pronouns when mentioning ex-girlfriends. As for activism, I've dropped out twice in past years, before because of either something that was directly said about bisexuals being "traitors," or because of a fear that someone would say so. It was like, I have all this passion and energy for the cause, but gay people don't want me, so why am I killing myself for a bunch of people who don't want me around? I thought I dropped out of activism for good when I got married. The sense that little straight-acting heterosexual privileged me didn't belong anywhere in the gay community was really strong - in my head. Little did I know I would immerse more DEEPLY after that! It was when those marriage amendments swept the elections in 2004 that I thought, Oh my god, that's MY community they're doing this to, I don't give a rat's tail if they want me or not, I'm doing something!!!! I not only signed myself up for LGBT organizational memberships, I signed my husband up as my partner. Even so, I was terrified the first time I went to a gay rights community forum after I got married. I was like: Do I still belong here??
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#34
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Polly |
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#35
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And I felt the same pain... my first love was my mostly-straight best friend. At the time, had we had any concept of what homosexuality even *was* (trust me, when I say I grew up sheltered, I mean it) we might have been each others' first lovers. We used to lie in bed, tangled up in each other, and lament that one of us wasn't a boy. But it never even occurred to us to kiss. Now, years later, I identify as bisexual and she identifies as very, very straight. It still makes me a little sad. Quote:
I am definitely smack dab in the middle of the Kinsey scale, which has been a source of frustration for one reason or another for years... mostly because when I was struggling with the "morality" of homosexuality, it bothered me that I wasn't only attracted to guys, and then once I got over that, I dealt with the same issues Zerbie has been talking about, of being afraid to come out as bi to the GLBT community for fear of being rejected, but also not able to lie about the fact that I'm not lesbian, as I'm not *solely* (or even mostly) attracted to women. It's split right down the middle.
__________________
"I have this terribly archaic notion that art should be about beauty... and passion... and, well, redefining an imperfect world in a perfect way." -- Still Breathing |
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#36
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Is there any other reason for watching that show? ![]() Though my favorite character was always Emmett. And I live in terror of turning into Debbie someday. ![]() Quote:
Now that we have very clear open air in this thread, it seems like a safe time to admit something. Troy could really be onto something about bisexuals assuming that gays can avoid same-sex relationships without cost. When I was a very little girl, I thought that all "homosexuals" were capable of loving either men OR women, since that's how I was, and because it didn't occur to me that other queer folk were not all bisexual. Gasp! ![]() Proving Troy's point, am I? Well, let's see. . . that was in kindergarten. By about age 10, I had figured out that gay people were uniquely responsive only with ONE sex. And since they had no choice in the matter, it seemed all the more important that they not be denied the chance to love and be loved. So, I really don't "get" why anyone - I don't care what sexuality you are - would tell gay people that they have to change or erase an intrinsic part of their own nature and stifle their ability to give and receive love. What could be more cruel than denying love to someone for an entire lifetime?
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#37
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Now, this movie you and Brent are talkin' about - it's starting to sound really, reeeeeally good. Yummy love scenes? Okay - this movie doesn't have any Nazis in it, does it? (so many have, and I so can't watch that stuff)If it's Nazi-free, I'm renting it.
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#38
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Maybe I should just buy it already.And no, no Nazis! Fairly modern setting, I believe, and has to do with rowing teams. I can't wait 'til you see it and tell me what you think!
__________________
"I have this terribly archaic notion that art should be about beauty... and passion... and, well, redefining an imperfect world in a perfect way." -- Still Breathing |
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#39
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Zerbie - I think that the most anyone could ask of any of us is to be a "part-time" or "now & again" activist -- and hats off to you for the work you have done. It would be hypocritical of me to indict anyone for taking a "break" from activism after I have spent most of my own life on the sidelines. Moreover, I could have just as easily said that gay people don't show up at meetings -- because by and large, people who aren't personally affected by bigotry tend to wonder what all the fuss is about (the "fuss" about LGBT rights). The heart of my personal revelation had more to do with the "Anti-Gay" activists... and that I'm wondering if their activism might not be fueled in large part by their own personal sexual identity embattlements. Wouldn't it be remarkable to discover the people we are debating are, in reality, themselves trying to keep at bay their own demons and temptations. Maybe Senator Craig and James Dobson and many (most?) others are hoping, in the way of affirmation, that their struggle against recognizing the humanity of our community will somehow provide them with the strength to keep their own "straight masks" firmly in place! ... and how would the foreknowledge of such a remarkable dynamic inform our own activism? How different would be our approach if we understood, for example that -- "of course he will believe that my lifestyle was a choice... because for him, it was a choice!" Anyway - that's my thought for the day. And I love the discussion all this has stirred. Of course, there may be no way of knowing for sure, but wouldn't it be incredible to discover that the 80% of all people are bisexual? Then we would really have to ask how 90% of a population (LGBT) could be so oppressed by 10% (totally straight) for so long. Now there's some food for thought! Peace & love, Troy
__________________
-- "You must be the change you wish to see in the world." -- Mohandas Gandhi
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#40
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http://wunsicdude.blogspot.com/ |
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