There is a particular kind of quiet that comes with being bisexual. It isn’t the silence of absence, but the silence of being misunderstood—of existing in a space that people often try to simplify, label, or erase altogether. To be bisexual is to live in the in-between, but that “between” is not confusion or indecision. It is fullness. It is the ability to feel connection, attraction, and love across more than one gender, even when the world insists on drawing hard lines.

One of the most persistent misconceptions about bisexuality is that it is a phase, a stop along the way to something more “definite.” But bisexuality is not a halfway point. It is not a pause before choosing a side. It is its own complete identity, one that does not require validation through equal experiences or visible relationships. A bisexual person does not become “more real” because of who they are currently dating. Their identity is not determined by proximity—it is determined by truth.

There is also the internal dialogue—the constant questioning that can arise not from uncertainty, but from external pressure. Am I “enough” of this or that? Do I belong here? These thoughts often don’t originate from within, but from a world that prefers binaries. Society is comfortable with clear categories: straight or gay, this or that. Bisexuality disrupts that comfort, and in doing so, sometimes leaves the person holding it feeling like they must explain themselves over and over again.

Yet within that complexity is a kind of quiet strength. Bisexuality invites a broader understanding of connection. It challenges assumptions about attraction and opens space for a more fluid experience of love. It allows for a deeper awareness of self—not because it is easy, but because it requires reflection. It asks questions and refuses easy answers.

There is also joy here. Joy in recognizing attraction without shame. Joy in understanding oneself more fully. Joy in the freedom to feel without restriction. These moments may be quieter than the struggles, but they are just as real—perhaps even more so.

To be bisexual is to exist beyond simple definitions. It is to carry both visibility and invisibility at once. It is to navigate misunderstanding while holding onto personal truth. And ultimately, it is to realize that identity is not something that needs to be proven—it is something that is lived, quietly and honestly, every day.

One response

  1. kdaddy23 Avatar

    I love what you’ve said here! If there’s something that plagues bisexuals and bisexuality, it’s the social discourse that has been totally inaccurate since way before I was born. The confusion and internal dialog comes into play because you know what you are but living in a world where people insist that (a) there’s no way you can be what you’ve said you are, (b) what you’re going through is just a phase and (c) insisting that you must really be gay.

    We live in a world that doesn’t understand sexuality. They understand heterosexuality, barely understand homosexuality but as I’ve been saying for a couple of decades now, bisexuality take everything we think we know about love, sex, and relationships ad throws it right into the trash.

    Anyone I’ve talked to about bisexuality – or they’ve come to me to be introduced to it – gets told that becoming bisexual is a life-changing experience that’ll open your eyes to the truth our social norms tries to hide… and you’ll learn a lot about yourself in the process.

    Your “explanation” is much more eloquent than my own.

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