Bisexual Teens Set the Record Straight

By Joleen Rivera, 17, Staff Writer

Originally Published: Apr 13, 2004

Revised: Jan 26, 2007

Our society likes people and things to be simple. Like, are you black or white? Are you a Democrat or Republican? Are you heterosexual or homosexual? But the fact is, things are complicated. And people, especially, can't always fit into either/or categories.

Just like race doesn't only consist of black and white, but includes "mulatto," sexuality doesn't just consist of "gay" or "straight"—it includes bisexuality.


Tiffany
 
"A bisexual person has the potential to be sexually and/or romantically attracted to more than one sex, but not necessarily at the same time or to the same extent," explains Robyn Ochs, editor of the Bisexual Resource Guide and the International Directory of Bisexual Groups.

"Bisexuality stretches our imaginations, just like multiracial people do," she adds. "It forces us to acknowledge complexity, and many people are uncomfortable with that."

Since bisexuality forces many people to accept the complexity of sexuality, this can make them feel bias against bisexuals. This bias leads to many myths and stereotypes about bisexual teens.

Myth 1: Bisexuals Are Just Confused

Bisexual teens are often not taken seriously because bisexuality, in the eyes of some straight and gay people, often equals confusion.

"There's a big difference between being confused and undecided than being undefined," says Tiffany, 17, from Lebanon, NJ.

What's the difference? one might ask. Many bisexual teens don't want to be defined by either homosexuality or heterosexuality. They feel like it traps them. It's not that most bisexual teens don't know what category they fit under, it's that they don't wish to be under any category at all.

The "confusion" myth has no basis in fact, according to Ochs.

"Bisexuality is not a state of confusion," she says, adding that many people are "in denial about the realness of young people's sexualities."

"People will often discount what teenagers say, with 'Oh sure, you're just experimenting. You're just going through a phase. You don't really know how you feel.' It's very disrespectful, because teenagers do know what they feel."

Myth 2: Bisexuals Are Slutty and Easy

Ironically, the same openness that bisexuals' value can, at times, work against them. The fact that bisexual teens have relations with males and females often leads to the stereotype that they're "sex maniacs" who can't be trusted.

"We're thought to be 'slutty' people who hit on and sleep with just about everyone," says Megan, 15, of Wildwood, IL.

"I've heard bisexual people called 'perverts,' 'delusional,' and even, get this, 'greedy'—like we're out to screw everything we see," says Steve, 17, of Newton, NJ.

Surprisingly, according to some bisexual teens, gay and lesbian teens also hold these stereotypes to be true.

Adena, 18, of Chicago, IL, is a member of BiYouth, an online resource for bisexual teens. She says that the hardest part about being "classified" as a bisexual is that "a majority of the population assumes that you sleep around a lot. The worst thing is that lesbians and gay men also believe these stereotypes."

"It's really hard, because you don't feel completely accepted in the gay/les community, yet you don't fit in with straight people either," says Adena.

Many bisexual teens are actually in committed relationships, and detest it when the "easy" label is shed on them.

"Just as straight teens have a number of relationships during their high school years, so do bisexual teens. The only difference is that they might not always be with the same sex," explains Tiffany.

"It disgusts me that people think I'm that way. I'm in a very committed relationship, and I would never behave like that, even if I was single," says Megan.

This myth is simply not true, and not all bisexuals are sex-crazed, according to Ochs.

"One can be bisexual without having acted on it, just like you can be a heterosexual person who's never had sex," she says.

Myth 3: Bisexuals Are Really Just Gay

A lot of people believe that bisexuality isn't real and that it's just a gray area between deciding whether you're gay or straight," says Adena. "But to me, and a lot of other bisexuals I know, it's real."

Ochs emphasizes that bisexuality is "a long-term identity." She has identified as a bisexual for 25 years.

"However, people do have the right to switch their 'labels,' and this shouldn't cast doubt on the validity of any sexual orientation," she adds.

Ochs also mentions Alfred Kinsey, the famous human sexuality researcher, who believed that there aren't "two discrete populations, heterosexual and homosexual; only the human mind invents categories and tries to force facts into separate pigeonholes. The sooner we learn this ... the sooner we shall reach a sound understanding of the realities of sex."

Myth 4: Bisexuality Is a Fad

Is sexuality like buying a shirt from the Gap, because it's in style? Some teens argue that bisexuality has become a trend.

Bisexuality might seem like a trend, because "more people are familiar with the word, and society in general is more accepting of bisexual (and also gay and lesbian) people than ever before," explains Ochs.

Ochs adds that many more young people are coming out as bisexual today than ever before. But does this make bisexuality a trend? Or is this influx just another result of society's slow acceptance of coming out (post-Ellen D.)?

Adena believes that there are many bisexual girls who act as if it is a trend.

"I think that there are a lot of girls who do become very 'out there' bi, because it's 'trendy' and they think it's cool, but this doesn't mean that they aren't bisexual. It's more like bisexual promiscuity is a trend more than the actual orientation of bisexuality," she says.

Moving Beyond Labels

The last thing teens want is to be ashamed of their sexuality. But proving these myths wrong has been a continuing battle for many bisexual teens. Due to these stereotypes, some feel that the word "bisexual" no longer encompasses their sexuality.

Adena wanted to find a word to describe her sexuality that didn't have the word "sex" in it.

"I really disliked the word 'bisexual,' because it sounds like it's all about sleeping with people of both genders. I wanted to find a word like 'gay,' 'lesbian,' or 'straight'—a label that encompassed the idea that love is gender blind. A word that wasn't so black-and-white," she says.

As a result, Adena has been using the term "queer" instead.

Ochs advises teens to "go ahead and try on the labels that feel like the best fit, but remember, labels are just words that we use to give other people information about ourselves. They aren't real. What's real is you."

The Bottom Line

Many bisexual teens simply see bisexuality for what it really gives them—a pure and natural attraction for a person, which surpasses gender.

"I always say that I'm attracted to someone because of his or her personality, not a penis or lack thereof," says Adena.

Steve sheds a different light on bisexuality. To him, it is a study of beauty.

"Your eyes are really open to the reality that there is beauty all around you," he says. "People are so very beautiful."
 
Editors' Note: For more information on bisexuality, check out the Bisexual Resource Center or the National Youth Advocacy Coalition.

 

 

 
 
 

Your Comments

I think i'm a lesbian

Posted by: angelkitty on Oct 2nd, 2008 9:34pm

i think i am because i have the the hugest crush on a girl
but i don't crush on boys. everytime i talk to a boy they
just seem mean. for some reason i just feel safer when i'm
with a girl

Myth 4: Bisexuality Is a Fad

Posted by: uncertainfreak on Aug 23rd, 2008 12:02am

I have meet about maybe 5 girls who say they're bi but they
either admit later or wont even like kissing a girl. I get
really annoying. Bcuz i am and they are just making
bisexuality seem more fake. It makes me sick... Oh and about
it being a sin, I think people who think that don't have
love in their hearts. I consider, for at least me, it means
to be able to love more than others. Its a positive way to
view it.

RE: is it a sin

Posted by: DanR on Aug 4th, 2008 11:27am

This is a really tough question, and each person and each
religion is going to have a different feeling about it.
There are some people who believe that it is not the fact
that you are gay, lesbian or bisexual that is a sin, but the
act of having sex with someone of the same gender as you
that is the sin. There are many other who do not believe
this at all. Check out this link from the Religious
Institue on Sexual Morality, Justice and Healing:
http://religiousinstitute.org/index.html.

is it a sin

Posted by: hbanana120 on Aug 2nd, 2008 12:48am

k so i think that i am bi and i told mi friend and then the
whole skool heard so now i am a laughing stalk. i mostly
hang out with the lezs and the gays and i am proud of it but
mi grandma works at a church and one day she told me that
being bi and lez and gay is a sin. i almost cried cuz i do
wut ever it takes to please the lord but i do not sin so is
not being striaght a sin cuz i think that i am bi plzz help
me

Wake up just a tiny bit

Posted by: Devils_advocate26 on Jul 30th, 2008 2:29am

I aint a professional, far from it, though i have spent a
good majority of my yr 12 studying the topic. Yes, bi is a
real sexuality you can be born with. But since the idea of
"emos" the idea of bi sexuality being attractive has been
huge. As often if not more the claim of being "Bi" is a 2D
attempt to be less intimidating for guys, and to appeal to
the threesom dream for girls. I'm a straight guy, but i've
been attracted to guys and even kissed one i get it

bisexual....

Posted by: emoangel1625 on Jun 21st, 2008 11:44pm

ima bisexual an im proud of it. i hate how alot of people ar
homophobes an treat us different jus becuz of our sexuality.
our sexual orientation shudnt b the only thing that defines
a person. people shud b givin a chance an not jus hav a
label on their head jus becuz of wat they do in their
private life.

Re: I need some advice

Posted by: dragongal8813 on Apr 27th, 2008 10:39pm

I've been feeling the same way about my current boyfriend.
I only feel attracted to him part of the time, whereas I've
been in love with one of my other female friends for years.
It could mean that, but try it out..I prefer to describe
myself as a "hetero with a bicurious streak" because it
comes closer to how I actually feel without truly labeling
me as bi. I do feel attracted to both, however I am more
often attracted to guys than girls, but I still have girl
crushes.

New Label

Posted by: Young Grasshopper on Apr 12th, 2008 2:42pm

Hey, I think I'm a bi teen. I totally agree with the fact
that "bisexual" isn't exactly the nicest word. I hereby
move to make "queer" the new term for peope attracted to
both males and females. What do you think?

being bisexual

Posted by: oliviaxlovesxu on Mar 14th, 2008 5:24pm

by now i've accepted the label "bisexual". but i hate it.
there are way too many ways to be a human. it's impossible
to label all of them.

Being Different, I Guess.

Posted by: GirlCalledQuinn on Dec 25th, 2007 5:23am

Trying to fing your sexuality is extremely difficult! Being
bi, is probably the hardest sexuality to come to terms with.
You don't know who you belong with, which people you should
fall in love with. And it doesn't help that there are so
many stero-types out there to group us into.

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