-
No, Not All Bi Women Love Threesomes: Silly Myths About Women and Bisexuality
Sign up to stay up to date on the latest headlines via email.
So you’re watching a blazing hot sex scene between Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie -- and you can’t decide which one turns you on more. You have a boyfriend, but you just can’t stop fantasizing about your female roomie’s bangin’ curves. Are you bisexual? If you’ve ever wondered, read on.
It’s hard to get a handle on just how many women are bisexual. A study of American women 45 and under found that 2.8% thought of themselves as bisexual, although 11% of women had had a sexual experience with a member of the same sex during their lifetime. And it gets more complicated -- two-thirds of women who had had a sexual experience with another woman considered themselves to be heterosexual.
So what makes a woman bisexual? How can you tell whether you’re bisexual? And if you are, what does that mean?
Being bisexual means that you are attracted to members of both sexes, even if you’re not sleeping with them. (Many people find this term limiting, because it doesn’t include people who are transgendered, intersexual, or otherwise don’t fit easily into one of two sexes -- some people prefer to call themselves “queer” or one of many other terms, but “bisexual” is still the most commonly used term. )
Here are some things bisexuality doesn’t mean:
With Runaway Greed Infecting Corporate America, Maybe It's Time to Start Talking About a Maximum Wage Again
Romney's Anti-Immigrant Stance Could Destroy the Nation's Economy
How Rick Santorum Stokes Race and Class Anxieties to Win Unlikely Primary Victories
How Zealous Clergy and Their Media Enablers Are Manufacturing a Controversy Over Birth Control Coverage
Why is the Obama Administration Suddenly Fixated on Stomping out Medical Pot?


By Kristen Gwynne | AlterNet
By Kristen Gwynne | AlterNet
By Kristen Gwynne | AlterNet
By Steven D | Booman Tribune
By Joan McCarter | Daily Kos
By Sara Robinson | Alternet
By Amy Goodman | Democracy Now!
By Tara Lohan | AlterNet
By Maria Tchijov | Food and Water Watch
By Jonathan Weiler | Independent Weekly






