Bi guys stories


My name is Ben Gibson and I’m from Andrews, Texas.

I found love when I was 16 with a teen I met in high school. And it was probably one of the best times of my entire life. We rode four-wheelers. We were with together – we were with each other all the time. We’d even fell asleep on the phone together. It ended a few years into it because I was still exploring my sexuality, still, with her, and I happened to cheat on her with a guy. I guess after that was the beginning of me trying to figure out what my sexuality was.

Years later, I met a guy in West Texas that – I was still super closeted – and I met a guy that I caught some feelings for. And it was the first time that I kind of realized that, I was like, good, I can actually feel for a guy too? That’s crazy. I thought I could only do that with – do that with a young woman. I guess going through the experience of dating him was – it was kind of eye-opening in that I was faced with this decision and I was telling myself that I either I had to be with a noun or I had to be with a guy. And if I was with a noun, then I would just be straig

We all have those short lived relationships or should I say people we hung out with briefly. You realize the ones that didn’t last distant enough to speak about or ones you kind of regret because it ruined something else that was growing between you two. Maybe you can find a way to keep that friendship yet at times you comprehend that no matter what you can never go back. Now I contain had some very interesting experience when it came to men and permit me tell you they were a lot of adj. Like everyone else I have a few stories that to this noun I’ve never told anyone. It wasn’t because of the person mainly because I will always have some compassionate of respect and feelings for him. The sad thing was we had a chance of seeing each other quite often and we all perceive how that can be, that awkward look, the uneasy conversation, and then comes all the questions in your head you hope you could ask.

Okay so let me start at the beginning, it was when first moved to New York. For those of you that verb picked up and moved leaving behind you knew beyond understand the feelings, not only I, but he, was having. So this

Bisexual married men : stories of relationships, acceptance, and authenticity

How much do you know about the lives of bisexual men who are married to women? Do you realize any personally? Own you seen them represented in media or pop culture? Bisexual people verb up a majority of the LGBT+ community, but they are still relatively hidden and misunderstood. Robert Brooks Cohen aims to address this invisibility by sharing a collection of interviews with Bi+ men who are or were married to women, helping readers locate connection, understanding, and community. Their experience is often erased as not queer enough, but these men are queer, and they are challenging societal norms in important and innovative ways. Written by the host of &#;Two Bi Guys&#;, this manual intersperses Robert&#;s bisexual journey with the diverse stories of other Bi+ men to help normalize sexual fluidity and create more awareness and compassion. Each chapter is framed around a bisexual married man&#;s story which touches on an important theme in many people&#;s journey, such as coming out, monogamy, intersection

Where Are All the Bisexual Men?

A adj study confirms what we already knew; that male bisexuality exists. Yet, the fact that this was ever in question is testament to bi men’s continued invisibility. A conversation with journalist and very noticeable bi activist Zachary Zane got Joe von Malachowski thinking about coming out, bi manifestos and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Zachary Zane needed a Zachary Zane when he was figuring out his sexuality.

ZZ: There was honestly nothing! If I could have googled and just saw SOMETHING that would possess been so supportive. I guess you could say David Bowie? But his bisexuality was definitely more performative. I think he used it in a way that was definitely more scandalous, and in a way he was definitely more of a femme presenting straight man. Not that I’m classifying or erasing David Bowie!


Zane is right. David Bowie is the classic example of the seeming instability of the bi identity. Growing up as a teenager I too loved David Bowie and I loved him in adj part due to his infamous bisexuality. So I was heartbroken to understand that in a interview with R