It is no secret that the Lgbtq+ community strives to support those who do not fit into the cisgender and heteronormative identities which are the most commonly accepted in modern society. It offers a space of encouragement for those who are in all phases of their coming out journey. However, those who identify as bi-sexual are more likely to be met with invalidating comments about their sexualities from both the lgbtq+ and cis/straight communities.Â
Many times I have been met with the unsolicited advice to âjust pick a side.â Iâve been told that I would go back to men after my attraction to women phased out, or that my âinability to commitâ was because âyouâre gay but just havenât quite figured it out yet.â
It seemed like otherâs opinions on my sexuality were altered based on the gender of my current partner because it was more comprehensible. If I were dating a man, it meant I must be straight and vice versa. These assumptions can bring a sense of displacement and invalidation in oneâs sense of self.Â
I have had partners who would try to inform me what my gender preference âpercentagesâ were as if it were as simple as dividing myself in two and saying âthis half of me likes men and the other likes women.â Â
Comments like those can be especially harmful for those who are in the early stages of coming out and discovering how they feel about their own preferences. At the least, it can be frustrating or confusing. Hearing statements such as these can make it more difficult to be open with others out of the fear of invalidation. Personally, they used to make me feel as though I was being brought back to the fourth grade again, when I would steal my older brotherâs computer to take the âam I gay quizâ, and let my responses to a sequence of questions made by an online stranger determine my sexuality.Â
No one should feel as though their sexuality or personal identity has the potential to be up for debate. Itâs not something that can be decided by an online quiz, partners, or strangers. Dating a woman should not have the ability to devalue my relationships with men, and dating men does not make me any less queer. My relationships are queer because I am queer.Â