|
Edited on Thu Mar-15-07 01:59 AM by Kutjara
First, my credentials (because I want my personal bias to be clear): I'm straight (by contemporary standards).
I've never really understood the problem many people in the "straight" or "gay" community have with bisexuality. The invective I've heard is out of all proportion to any reasonable comment about the bisexual lifestyle. It seems there is something intrinsically threatening about the "freedom" of bisexuals, compared to their monosexual bretheren (or, indeed, sisteren).
By talking about sexuality in terms of "choice," we are tacitly accepting the framing that has done so much damage to any understanding of sexual diversity. Who gives a damn if a particular sexual proclivity is innate, chosen or decided by the conjunction of the stars? Yes, there are probably good biological, social and emotional reasons for any given preference, but they are nobody's business but the individual's and, perhaps, those anthropologists and biologists who wish to study human behavior and development.
Moving beyond the idea of "fault" that "choice" implies, bisexuality is no different from any other expression of lust or love. Nobody falls in love with "men" or "women." People fall in love with an individual. It seems very strange to me that this would be a concern for anyone. If I were in a relationship with a bisexual, I might be concerned that they would fall out of love with me or start being attracted to someone else, but these feelings would be no different that if I were straight or gay. Jealousy and insecurity can affect any relationship, so the fact that the person is bisexual is irrelevant.
I think many people believe bisexuals are simply gay people who are "in denial." Some are afraid of being in a relationship with a bisexual, because that person may suddenly "flip" to the "other side." From the few bisexuals I've known, this worry seems unfounded. As one friend said, "why the hell would I limit myself to one sex? It's like choosing to be colorblind." Now, this person was in a long term, committed relationship and was (as far as any of her friends knew) faithful, but she still relished the fact that she was attracted to both men and women. Why indeed be wilfully blind?
I think the "debate" about bisexuality says far more about the narrow mindset of many straight and gay people, than about any danger bisexuality itself presents.
|