sparkindarkness: (Default)
sparkindarkness ([personal profile] sparkindarkness) wrote2009-03-22 03:20 pm

Ok, let’s have an awkward conversation.

I’ve poked around recently the idea that various oppressed and disadvantaged groups should stop snarling at each other and stand together more strongly as allies naturally united against oppression, injustice and hateful shit none of us should have to deal with.

And there’s one particular element of this that bugs me muchly and, since it also hits kinda close to home, I think it’s one I’m going to poke a little extra.

There’s a chance here that I’m going to go wrong here. I’ll (naturally) try not to, but I apologise in advance if I do.

That being said, I tentatively poke my toe into that nasty little cess pool we don’t like to talk about - why, in the GBLT community, are some of the G&L so damned uncomfortable with the B&T? Well, a lot of it comes down to your standard prejudice (as I’ve said 100 times before, just because you’re a member of an oppressed group doesn’t mean you are immune to being an arsehole) but I think there’s 2 other issues as well. The first - the desire for “specialness” and the way no-one likes their causes to be even slightly diluted is easy to understand and equally easy to dismiss as ridiculous and part and parcel of the whole bigotness. The second, though, I think is the bigger issue:

Bisexuals and Transgendered remind us of items of prevalent homophobia that get our backs up. By reminding us of that can lead to prejudice from gays towards Bisexuals and transexuals To elaborate from that HIGHLY inflammatory statement (it‘s getting long, so split in 2):

Bisexuals
The issues
This raises many hot button issues. Firstly, and perhaps mainly, is a sense of anger and even envy that a bisexual can paddle in the pool but get out if the water gets cold. I’ve spoken before about how I find people pretending to be gay for profit or gain offends me (a link to a comment thread where I vent: http://community.livejournal.com/thisthingwedo/6082.html?thread=167106#t167106) - and to an extent the same rough feeling can apply to bisexuals. NOT because they’re pretending but because there’s a sense that they can stop. They don’t have to do this. A bisexual man can jump out the water and say “pass me some boobies” and reintegrate with a society that has all the menfolk doing that boobie loving. And we can’t. We can’t get out the water when it’s cold or there are rapids or rabid crocodiles with bees in their mouths. In short, there’s an idea that bisexuals have a CHOICE which means a) they don’t get the same shit we do and b) if the water gets really rough, well, maybe they’ll get out?

It’s where this idea of bisexuals being gays that just can’t admit it comes from - because they can ‘play straight’ to protect themselves bisexual is seen as cowardly.

Then there’s the nasty thing that a lot of the homophobic crazies are telling us gay folks we need to change, that we should change, that we could change if we just tried hard enough! Then there’s this group of people who CAN seemingly change and that oh-so-does-not-help when we say we CAN’T

So, I think, there’s a sense of resentment, a sense that they get off easy, an idea that they’re playing almost and irritation that they give ammunition to some of the crazies

And why it’s so very very wrong
I’ve said before that while we all have similar problems (prejudice) the devil is in the details - and I think a lot of gay critics of bisexuals are seeing bisexuals through the wrong lens - and missing the details they endure that we don’t have to.

The issue of choice - well it’s bullshit. A bisexual cannot “choose” not to be bisexual any more than we can choose not to be gay. Yes, they can PRETEND to be straight far more easily than we can - but that’s a double edged sword. The closet for bisexual people can cling much more closely because they can pretend - and it’s more easy to EXPECT them to pretend. A sizeable number of sensible people in the world today accept that homosexuality is inherent - when a gay person comes out to them, well, this person is now gay and the opposite sex is not in the picture, end of. Sadly for a bisexual when they come out there’s always that element of “well, you can still be straight, right?” A bi guy can dump his boyfriend and go find a girlfriend, right? Well no, they can’t - but refusal to pretend is treated as more... well, wilful or defiant, y’know? Even if it is as reasonable as expecting one half of an interracial couple to dump their partner and find someone with the same skin tone.

If anything the bisexual’s playing both sides means they can end up with even more grief about “changing” than we do, because even relatively reasonable, not rabidly crazy folk are going to assume that a bisexual can (or even should!) play straight. The people who will accept gays because we “can’t help it” will still give the bis shit because of the wrongful impression that they CAN. And all of this is made far far worse by so very many people not talking bisexuals seriously - just because a group can hide better doesn’t mean they don’t have to put up with shit - and WE of all people should know that!

In the end, the Bisexual community is one of the closest natural allies the homosexual community has. Treating them like shit is going nowhere.

Sparky’s guide to not giving bi people shit

Don’t take our anger at the way the homophobes treat us (and their demand for ‘change’) out on the bisexuals. It’s not fair - direct our anger sensibly.

Don’t belittle a bisexual’s issues, don’t play the “I’m more tortured than you” game.

Treat their issues with respect, understand they may have DIFFERENT issues from you. Don’t act like they’re the backing group for the Big Gay Angst - they need their issues aired as well

Don’t imply bisexuality is a choice. Don’t suggest a bisexual can pretend to be straight (or gay). Don’t suggest their partners are interchangeable. Don’t suggest they can stop being bisexual.

Don’t buy into stupid stereotypes. A bisexual isn’t a gay who can’t admit it. They are capable of monogamy. They aren’t shagging everything in trousers/skirts et al.

The Bisexuals are in it with us for the long haul, they’re not going to quit early, they’re not dabblers, they’re not weekend warriors. They’re in their with us - respect them for that.



There’s my waffle. Bisexuals please feel free to weigh in with the many things I’ve got wrong (but don’t feel obliged to). And my GBLT brothers and sisters - we’ve got enough shit being thrown at us, let’s not give each other a hard time, ‘kay?

[identity profile] wyrdrune.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 03:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Spot on! One thing to add:

Sadly for a bisexual when they come out there’s always that element of “well, you can still be straight, right?”

There's also the issue that a lot of straight men (I can't say if it's the same for women) appear to be less threatened by a gay guy than by a bi-guy. I have no idea why, and I have no idea of the "logic" behind it.

Any thoughts anyone else might have on the subject would be welcome.

[identity profile] stormcat.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 03:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I think I love you.

YES.

"Twice the chance for rejection on Saturday night," too.

[identity profile] klgaffney.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
*adds to your list in a devil's advocate sort of way.* twice the chance of rejection, twice the temptation--there's also the nasty insecurity that comes with the possibility not only being dumped/cheated on, but being dumped/cheated on with someone of a different gender. not everyone wants to deal with that possibility. =\

[identity profile] oxfordgirl.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 06:53 pm (UTC)(link)
This. Just this.

Thank you.

Glad this was brought up

[identity profile] home-of-usher.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 06:57 pm (UTC)(link)
I had always wondered why such hateful hurtful prejudice is directed towards Bi people. I've discovered quite a few friends and even relatives are bi or bi-curious and heard some of the icky drama they can get thrown at them for no other reason than they happen to find both sexes irresistibly attractive and compelling.

Strangely enough, I've encountered it through an RPG character too. Jareth is a Cultist of Ecstasy and an equal opportunity lover because he's a joybringer and everyone with a heart needs to know love and acceptance and affection regardless of who they are. He's colorblind and well Genderblind too. When he 'came out' to someone in a bar setting in a public room, I suddenly got flamed, not from the person he was speaking to, but another player who had issue with Jer's casual seeming swinging-both-ways was acceptable. Is it wrong for a Bi person to accept being Bi and discuss openly his choice of lifestyle with another person? Jer wasn't even bringing it up because he wanted to sleep with that other person, they were discussing difficult choices in their lives and that happened to be a topic. Since the other player insisted in chewing me out OOC without using the private message function, there was a huge public mess arguing the point until RPing got too difficult in the room and I switched to IM so that we could continue the conversation in peace. I can't verify that the other player was actually gay or even what gender. They could have just spoken up to vent regardless of relevance and disrupt RP like a troll. Some people seemed to be on Jer's side arguing back against the other player, most were just annoyed this was being discussed and disrupting RP. The other player tried to make it a personal issue accusing or suggesting I personally play this type of character because I must be living vicariously through them and thus they get to have issue with me because I must be Bi. (and I can see the point since maybe 90% of the gay characters on the chats seem to be played by females and maybe another 20% of the gay females are played by guys.) That was the point where I ran out of tolerance and left the room regardless of whether my leaving seemed to prove the other player right.

I can understand in some ways how it can bother straight people or gay people that Bi people are assumed to be just Greedy, but I never bought into the assumption that it was a casual choice. If anything I imagine discovering this part of sexuality can be even More confusing with trying to understand why your brain and hormones react so strongly to a well endowed man or a woman with a big rack, realizing this and screaming at your body to "MAKE UP IT'S MIND!?!?!11!elventy-one!1" Since they can't what do they do then? Sure, they seem to have options, but which one do they go with? There's already all the pressure and stigma to be one or the other. What does one do when they are stuck in the middle and how do they come out to their BF or GF about it? For bi people who seem to have it easy, I know better than to think they do. Bi people don't get a win-win situation all because they can go both ways. If anything, they are in a lose-lose situation because they'll never be fully accepted by either side.

In the end, the Bisexual community is one of the closest natural allies the homosexual community has. Treating them like shit is going nowhere.

Here here!

[identity profile] lilisonna.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 07:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Speaking as someone who's pretty much directly in the middle of the Kinsey scale, I'll say that you nailed it pretty well, so rather than address your points directly, I'll ramble for a bit.

For me -- particularly as a bisexual female -- there's also an odd sense of guilt. The guilt is even stronger since I wound up finding (and marrying) a partner who happened to be male, so I to all intents and purposes look pretty much like a happy het. I'm not; it's really a matter of timing and coincidence that my partner turned out male. But by loving the person that I do, I often feel like I'm not doing my part to support GLBT rights. (Not, mind you, that I'm going to drop him to go find a cause-acceptable female.)

I find it frustrating as a bi female to hear things like "Oh, you're only interested in girls because it's trendy/men find it hot/Madonna kissed Brittany." No, really. I like girls because, well, they're girls. They have neat squishy bits and they're tasty and yummy and awesome. Denying that I am sexually attracted to women would be a denial of who I am, and that's not good.

Really, I think the point to emphasize in the whole Then there’s the nasty thing that a lot of the homophobic crazies are telling us gay folks we need to change, that we should change, that we could change if we just tried hard enough! Then there’s this group of people who CAN seemingly change and that oh-so-does-not-help when we say we CAN’T saga is that actually, no. Bisexuals can't change either. The non-poly of us are perfectly capable of picking one person (of some indeterminate gender) and sticking with them, but that doesn't meant that we don't occasionally want or lust after the other one. The feelings and desires are still there. just because I'm married to a wonderful man doesn't keep me from looking at attractive women. (It also doesn't keep me from looking at attractive men either.)

Anyway, thumbs up. You did good, Sparky.

[identity profile] bladespark.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 09:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Lots of good things said here. *nodnodnods*

(And it's not just the gay community being gits towards the bi and trans people, I've seen the trans people particularly being gits right back. The most homophobic twit I've ever met was a trans woman. I wanted to smack her for her hypocrisy. Augh.)

[identity profile] thisdaydreamer.livejournal.com 2009-03-23 02:53 am (UTC)(link)
Somewhere, my sister is applauding very loudly.

She was bi and loved fiercely, and was loved just as fiercely, by people of both genders. She was also an outspoken advocate for gay rights.

If she had been forced to give up her bisexuality, she would have given up an essential part of who she was. As heartbroken as I will always be at her loss, I am so very happy that she lived her life so fully.

[identity profile] home-of-usher.livejournal.com 2009-03-24 12:35 am (UTC)(link)
I can't wait to see what Sparky has to say about the Transgender. Due to the RP world, I've known a friend playing a Hermaphrodite. As a result I had to look up more information on them (not to mention come up with writing entirely new pronouns whenever we addressed the character.)Hermaphrodites are not something you really hear much about and it was difficult to find information much less any biographical account of how they deal with sexuality. And it's not just 50/50 either. There's FIVE DIFFERENT KINDS! Most often parents Pick which gender a hermaphrodite is at birth. They decide whether you get to keep your girl or boy parts no matter what ratio you are given them. For those that are allowed to be both, what must it be like to grow up that way with that choice so clearly outlined on your body. It's not as if they should be assumed to be the ultimate bisexual.

[identity profile] snuck.livejournal.com 2009-03-26 01:09 am (UTC)(link)
You've just used a thousand words to say what I've been saying for years in five

;)

Being bi isn't being greedy

:P