ReportWire

Tag: bisexual

  • Ysabel Jurado claims victory: A new era for Los Angeles City Council District 14

    Troy Masters was a cheerleader. When my name was called as the Los Angeles Press Club’s Print Journalist of the Year for 2020, Troy leapt out of his seat with a whoop and an almost jazz-hand enthusiasm, thrilled that the mainstream audience attending the Southern California Journalism Awards gala that October night in 2021 recognized the value of the LGBTQ community’s Los Angeles Blade. 

    That joy has been extinguished. On Wednesday, Dec. 11, after frantic unanswered calls from his sister Tammy late Monday and Tuesday, Troy’s longtime friend and former partner Arturo Jiminez did a wellness check at Troy’s L.A. apartment and found him dead, with his beloved dog Cody quietly alive by his side. The L.A. Coroner determined Troy Masters died by suicide. No note was recovered. He was 63.

    Considered smart, charming, committed to LGBTQ people and the LGBTQ press, Troy’s inexplicable suicide shook everyone, even those with whom he sometimes clashed. 

    Troy’s sister and mother – to whom he was absolutely devoted – are devastated. “We are still trying to navigate our lives without our precious brother/son. I want the world to know that Troy was loved and we always tried to let him know that,” says younger sister Tammy Masters.

    Tammy was 16 when she discovered Troy was gay and outed him to their mother. A “busy-body sister,” Tammy picked up the phone at their Tennessee home and heard Troy talking with his college boyfriend. She confronted him and he begged her not to tell. 

     “Of course, I ran and told Mom,” Tammy says, chuckling during the phone call. “But she – like all mothers – knew it. She knew it from an early age but loved him unconditionally; 1979 was a time [in the Deep South] when this just was not spoken of.  But that didn’t stop Mom from being in his corner.”

    Mom even marched with Troy in his first Gay Pride Parade in New York City. “Mom said to him, ‘Oh, my! All these handsome men and not one of them has given me a second look! They are too busy checking each other out!” Tammy says, bursting into laughter. “Troy and my mother had that kind of understanding that she would always be there and always have his back!

    “As for me,” she continues, “I have lost the brother that I used to fight for in any given situation. And I will continue to honor his cause and lifetime commitment to the rights and freedom for the LGBTQ community!”

    Tammy adds: “The outpouring of love has been comforting at this difficult time and we thank all of you!”

    Troy Masters and his beloved dog Cody.

    No one yet knows why Troy took his life. We may never know. But Troy and I often shared our deeply disturbing bouts with drowning depression. Waves would inexplicitly come upon us, triggered by sadness or an image or a thought we’d let get mangled in our unresolved, inescapable past trauma. 

    We survived because we shared our pain without judgment or shame. We may have argued – but in this, we trusted each other. We set everything else aside and respectfully, actively listened to the words and the pain within the words. 

    Listening, Indian philosopher Krishnamurti once said, is an act of love. And we practiced listening. We sought stories that led to laughter. That was the rope ladder out of the dark rabbit hole with its bottomless pit of bullying and endless suffering. Rung by rung, we’d talk and laugh and gripe about our beloved dogs.

    I shared my 12 Step mantra when I got clean and sober: I will not drink, use or kill myself one minute at a time. A suicide survivor, I sought help and I urged him to seek help, too, since I was only a loving friend – and sometimes that’s not enough. 

    (If you need help, please reach out to talk with someone: call or text 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. They also have services in Spanish and for the deaf.)

    In 2015, Troy wrote a personal essay for Gay City News about his idyllic childhood in the 1960s with his sister in Nashville, where his stepfather was a prominent musician. The people he met “taught me a lot about having a mission in life.” 

    During summers, they went to Dothan, Ala., to hang out with his stepfather’s mother, Granny Alabama. But Troy learned about “adult conversation — often filled with derogatory expletives about Blacks and Jews” and felt “my safety there was fragile.”  

    It was a harsh revelation. “‘Troy is a queer,’ I overheard my stepfather say with energetic disgust to another family member,” Troy wrote. “Even at 13, I understood that my feelings for other boys were supposed to be secret. Now I knew terror. What my stepfather said humiliated me, sending an icy panic through my body that changed my demeanor and ruined my confidence. For the first time in my life, I felt depression and I became painfully shy. Alabama became a place, not of love, not of shelter, not of the magic of family, but of fear.”

    At the public pool, “kids would scream, ‘faggot,’ ‘queer,’ ‘chicken,’ ‘homo,’ as they tried to dunk my head under the water. At one point, a big crowd joined in –– including kids I had known all my life –– and I was terrified they were trying to drown me.

    “My depression became dangerous and I remember thinking of ways to hurt myself,” Troy wrote.  

    But Troy Masters — who left home at 17 and graduated from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville — focused on creating a life that prioritized being of service to his own intersectional LGBTQ people. He also practiced compassion and last August, Troy reached out to his dying stepfather. A 45-minute Facetime farewell turned into a lovefest of forgiveness and reconciliation. 

    Troy discovered his advocacy chops as an ad representative at the daring gay and lesbian activist publication Outweek from 1989 to 1991. 

    “We had no idea that hiring him would change someone’s life, its trajectory and create a lifelong commitment” to the LGBTQ press, says Outweek’s co-founder and former editor-in-chief Gabriel Rotello, now a TV producer. “He was great – always a pleasure to work with. He had very little drama – and there was a lot of drama at Outweek. It was a tumultuous time and I tended to hire people because of their activism,” including Michelangelo Signorile, Masha Gessen, and Sarah Pettit.  

    Rotello speculates that because Troy “knew what he was doing” in a difficult profession, he was determined to launch his own publication when Outweek folded. “I’ve always been very happy it happened that way for Troy,” Rotello says. “It was a cool thing.” 

    Troy and friends launched NYQ, renamed QW, funded by record producer and ACT UP supporter Bill Chafin. QW (QueerWeek) was the first glossy gay and lesbian magazine published in New York City featuring news, culture, and events. It lasted for 18 months until Chafin died of AIDS in 1992 at age 35. 

    The horrific Second Wave of AIDS was peaking in 1992 but New Yorkers had no gay news source to provide reliable information at the epicenter of the epidemic.    

    “When my business partner died of AIDS and I had to close shop, I was left hopeless and severely depressed while the epidemic raged around me. I was barely functioning,” Troy told VoyageLA in 2018. “But one day, a friend in Moscow, Masha Gessen, urged me to get off my back and get busy; New York’s LGBT community was suffering an urgent health care crisis, fighting for basic legal rights and against an increase in violence. That, she said, was not nothing and I needed to get back in the game.”

    It took Troy about two years to launch the bi-weekly newspaper LGNY (Lesbian and Gay New York) out of his East Village apartment. The newspaper ran from 1994 to 2002 when it was re-launched as Gay City News with Paul Schindler as co-founder and Troy’s editor-in-chief for 20 years. 

    Staff of Gay News City in New York City, which Troy Masters founded in 2002.

    “We were always in total agreement that the work we were doing was important and that any story we delved into had to be done right,” Schindler wrote in Gay City News

    Though the two “sometimes famously crossed swords,” Troy’s sudden death has special meaning for Schindler. “I will always remember Troy’s sweetness and gentleness. Five days before his death, he texted me birthday wishes with the tag, ‘I hope you get a meaningful spanking today.’ That devilishness stays with me.” 

    Troy had “very high EI (Emotional Intelligence), Schindler says in a phone call. “He had so much insight into me. It was something he had about a lot of people – what kind of person they were; what they were really saying.”

    Troy was also very mischievous. Schindler recounts a time when the two met a very important person in the newspaper business and Troy said something provocative. “I held my breath,” Schindler says. “But it worked. It was an icebreaker. He had the ability to connect quickly.”  

    The journalistic standard at LGNY and Gay City News was not a question of “objectivity” but fairness. “We’re pro-gay,” Schindler says, quoting Andy Humm. “Our reporting is clear advocacy yet I think we were viewed in New York as an honest broker.” 

    Schindler thinks Troy’s move to Los Angeles to jump-start his entrepreneurial spirit and reconnect with Arturo, who was already in L.A., was risky. “He was over 50,” Schindler says. “I was surprised and disappointed to lose a colleague – but he was always surprising.”

    “In many ways, crossing the continent and starting a print newspaper venture in this digitally obsessed era was a high-wire, counter-intuitive decision,” Troy told VoyageLA. “But I have been relentlessly determined and absolutely confident that my decades of experience make me uniquely positioned to do this.”

    Troy launched The Pride L.A. as part of the Mirror Media Group, which publishes the Santa Monica Mirror and other Westside community papers. But on June 12, 2016, the day of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Fla., Troy said he found MAGA paraphernalia in a partner’s office. He immediately plotted his exit. On March 10, 2017, Troy and the “internationally respected” Washington Blade announced the launch of the Los Angeles Blade

    Troy Masters and then-Rep. Adam Schiff. (Photo courtesy of Karen Ocamb)

    In a March 23, 2017 commentary promising a commitment to journalistic excellence, Troy wrote: “We are living in a paradigm shifting moment in real time. You can feel it.  Sometimes it’s overwhelming. Sometimes it’s toxic. Sometimes it’s perplexing, even terrifying. On the other hand, sometimes it’s just downright exhilarating. This moment is a profound opportunity to reexamine our roots and jumpstart our passion for full equality.”

    Troy tried hard to keep that commitment, including writing a personal essay to illustrate that LGBTQ people are part of the #MeToo movement. In “Ending a Long Silence,” Troy wrote about being raped at 14 or 15 by an Amtrak employee on “The Floridian” traveling from Dothan, Ala., to Nashville. 

    “What I thought was innocent and flirtatious affection quickly turned sexual and into a full-fledged rape,” Troy wrote. “I panicked as he undressed me, unable to yell out and frozen by fear. I was falling into a deepening shame that was almost like a dissociation, something I found myself doing in moments of childhood stress from that moment on. Occasionally, even now.”

    From the personal to the political, Troy Masters tried to inform and inspire LGBTQ people.   

    Richard Zaldivar, founder and executive director of The Wall Las Memorias Project, enjoyed seeing Troy at President Biden’s Pride party at the White House.  

    “Just recently he invited us to participate with the LA Blade and other partners to support the LGBTQ forum on Asylum Seekers and Immigrants. He cared about underserved community. He explored LGBTQ who were ignored and forgotten. He wanted to end HIV; help support people living with HIV but most of all, he fought for justice,” Zaldivar says. “I am saddened by his loss. His voice will never be forgotten. We will remember him as an unsung hero. May he rest in peace in the hands of God.” 

    Troy often featured Bamby Salcedo, founder, president/CEO of TransLatina Coalition, and scores of other trans folks. In 2018, Bamby and Maria Roman graced the cover of the Transgender Rock the Vote edition

    “It pains me to know that my dear, beautiful and amazing friend Troy is no longer with us … He always gave me and many people light,” Salcedo says. “I know that we are living in dark times right now and we need to understand that our ancestors and transcestors are the one who are going to walk us through these dark times… See you on the other side, my dear and beautiful sibling in the struggle, Troy Masters.”

    “Troy was immensely committed to covering stories from the LGBTQ community. Following his move to Los Angeles from New York, he became dedicated to featuring news from the City of West Hollywood in the Los Angeles Blade and we worked with him for many years,” says Joshua Schare, director of Communications for the City of West Hollywood, who knew Troy for 30 years, starting in 1994 as a college intern at OUT Magazine. 

    “Like so many of us at the City of West Hollywood and in the region’s LGBTQ community, I will miss him and his day-to-day impact on our community.”

    Troy Masters accepting a proclamation from the City of West Hollywood. (Photo by Richard Settle for the City of West Hollywood)

    “Troy Masters was a visionary, mentor, and advocate; however, the title I most associated with him was friend,” says West Hollywood Mayor John Erickson. “Troy was always a sense of light and working to bring awareness to issues and causes larger than himself. He was an advocate for so many and for me personally, not having him in the world makes it a little less bright. Rest in Power, Troy. We will continue to cause good trouble on your behalf.”

    Erickson adjourned the WeHo City Council meeting on Monday in his memory. 

    Masters launched the Los Angeles Blade with his partners from the Washington Blade, Lynne Brown, Kevin Naff, and Brian Pitts, in 2017. 

    Cover of the election issue of the Los Angeles Blade.

    “Troy’s reputation in New York was well known and respected and we were so excited to start this new venture with him,” says Naff. “His passion and dedication to queer LA will be missed by so many. We will carry on the important work of the Los Angeles Blade — it’s part of his legacy and what he would want.”

    AIDS Healthcare Foundation President Michael Weinstein, who collaborated with Troy on many projects, says he was “a champion of many things that are near and dear to our heart,” including “being in the forefront of alerting the community to the dangers of Mpox.”  

    “All of who he was creates a void that we all must try to fill,” Weinstein says. “His death by suicide reminds us that despite the many gains we have made, we’re not all right a lot of the time. The wounds that LGBT people have experienced throughout our lives are yet to be healed even as we face the political storm clouds ahead that will place even greater burdens on our psyches.”

    May the memory and legacy of Troy Masters be a blessing. 

    Veteran LGBTQ journalist Karen Ocamb served as the news editor and reporter for the Los Angeles Blade.

    Gisselle Palomera

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  • Putting the G in LGBTQ: Meet The ‘Mayor Of Montrose’

    Putting the G in LGBTQ: Meet The ‘Mayor Of Montrose’

    June is the anniversary of the Stonewall riots, often regarded as the tipping point in the modern gay rights movement and earning its recognition as Pride Month. Houston Press met with members of the LGBTQ community to learn more about their experiences belonging to this group. These are their stories.

    At 78 years young, openly gay Houstonian Dennis Beedon has been there, seen that and lived to tell the tale. The septuagenarian has been one of the key behind-the-scenes players with some of the most influential movers and shakers in Houston in an effort to benefit the LGBTQ community as well as Houstonians writ large.

    While he may not have been born in Texas, Beedon got here as soon as he could (after growing up in Chicago, serving a stint in the U.S. Army, and living in Puerto Rico and Florida), and he picked up the moniker as the “Mayor of Montrose” amongst his inner circle because of his status in the neighborhood – or “gayborhood,” as he might call it.

    How he earned that title is really where the story begins, and living his truth, especially when it comes to his sexuality, has been a tenet that he has never shied away from.

    “I was out to everybody, including my family and friends, since I was relatively young, give or take my military career,” he said. “I knew that I was gay during the military because I had a boyfriend when I was in the army, but I never never had any issues with anything LGBTQ during my time. My mind and openness really set in place when I moved to Houston, though, and that is because I lived in Montrose. I was exposed to everything and everybody during that period of time, both positive and negative in the sense of how Montrose was back in 1979 to 1981. I mean, it was pretty decadent.”

    Montrose — known nowadays for its eclectic cafes, coffee shops, bars, nightlife, restaurants and the rest — holds a rich history of being a safe haven for Houston’s LGBTQ community when the times were more or less as less pleasant for the queer community. It was also a place where the queer community felt free to live their life proudly, no matter how demure or flashy it might have appeared to outside eyes.

    The small in stature but mighty in voice Beedon followed suite. He did not let the fickle finger of popular opinion about the queer community sway him during his new beginnings in Houston. In fact, it’s where he found his passion for community involvement.

    That was also shortly before the outbreak of what is now known as HIV/AIDS, which galvanized Beedon’s determination to make a difference. He left his job in the insurance industry and answered the calling to community service.

    “I went to work for what was then still being put together, The Assistance Fund, [which consisted of] five gentlemen who were donating $500 a month each into a general fund,” Beedon said. “Because HIV was becoming so widely known as well as the issues created from it, those that were stricken with that illness were being fired from work. These five gentlemen were making $500 donations each month in into a general fund, and then they were paying for the COBRA insurance for those that were fired from their positions because of HIV just to keep their medical insurance covered.”

    Part of his passion for battling the spread and stigma of HIV/AIDS stemmed from his own personal experience. Beedon had witnessed the public shock of Rock Hudson’s death as well as the uproar over the game of musical chairs played by various funeral homes regarding Liberace’s body — both of whom passed away due to complications from the virus.

    However, over the course of his years, Beedon has seen healthcare progress to the point that an HIV diagnosis is no longer the death knell it formerly was. Instead, people are now living full and healthy lives thanks to breakthroughs in medication partnered with a healthy lifestyle.

    “It’s progressively gotten much, much, much better, in fact, to the point I was [in a relationship] with somebody for my first 21 years of living in Houston who was stricken with HIV.”

    Because of his involvement through various initiatives to promote awareness of and testing for HIV, which largely took place in the Montrose neighborhood, Beedon earned his now unforgettable nickname as the “Mayor of Montrose.”

    “In the clubs, I would run into people who would visit me at The Assistance Fund. Automatically, the connection was quite obvious of why they were at The Assistance Fund … it’s because they were looking for testing and for dollars to get medication. So they would approach me at the clubs and pull me to the side, and they would say, ‘I have a friend. Would you please talk to him or her, because they won’t go to a clinic to get tested.’” he said. “So, I would approach whomever they were talking about, counsel them and bring them into The Assistance Fund.”

    Because of his motherly nature, he earned the additional nickname “Mother of Montrose.” To examine the initials, it fittingly spells “mom.” But it’s also because he was well connected to local dignitaries.

    “They called me the Mayor of Montrose, or mom, because I was getting things done for them. I actually could go downtown and see the mayor of Houston, whoever that was at the time, and get some things done rather quickly,” he said.

    Since then, the name has stuck, as has his involvement in LGBTQ causes. One of his most recent endeavors is volunteering with the New Faces of Pride. The organization’s mission is to foster unity, inclusivity and empowerment within the diverse LGBTQ+ community of Houston through year-round events and fundraising initiatives.

    It’s signature event will be the New Faces of Pride Festival and Parade, with the festival running from noon to 6 p.m., Saturday followed by a parade at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall, 901 Bagby. Planet Pink!, the official after party, takes place at POST Houston, 401 Franklin until 2 a.m.

    The New Faces of Pride’s inaugural parade is the first of two pride-related parades this month, which has been a topic of conversation in the LGBTQ community, but Beedon says it is all good.

    “The New Faces of Pride has been very well received,” he said. “It’s a community thing, and that’s the focus.”

    As he slowly approaches 80, Beedon has no plans of slowing down anytime soon.

    “I’ve been able to do a few good things in people’s lives, and that makes me want to get up every day and keep going. I really am not going to retire, no matter what,” he said.

    The New Faces of Pride Festival runs from noon to 6 p.m., Saturday followed by a parade at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall, 901 Bagby. Planet Pink!, the official after party, takes place 9 p.m. – 2 a.m. at POST Houston, 401 Franklin. For information, visit newfacesofpride.org. The festival is free to $250 to attend. The parade is free. Planet Pink! is $25 – $60.

    Sam Byrd

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  • My husband cheated on me with a man

    My husband cheated on me with a man

    My husband cheated on me with a man and I just don’t know how to even react. You hear about married men cheating with women, but catching my husband cheating with another man? It feels like a double blow. I found the text messages on his phone. He swears it was a one-night thing, a stupid mistake fueled by work stress and him feeling disconnected from me. Part of me wants to believe him, for our daughter’s sake. But the other part feels so betrayed, like everything I thought I knew about him and our marriage is a lie.

    Does this mean he is gay? Or is he just bisexual? I can’t believe I never knew he was attracted to men. If he hid this huge thing from me, it makes me wonder what else I don’t know about him. How can I even consider staying with him after this? It feels like a worse kind of cheating somehow. My daughter is my biggest concern. How do I handle this situation with the least damage to her?

    Answer:

    Cheating by itself is devastating and painful. The question of your husband’s sexuality complicates things further, as it may feel as though you never really knew him. The mere act of seeing those texts on his phone can be traumatising in and of itself.
    It would be best if you could seek marriage counselling for both of you, since there can be several nuances to uncover which can only be done for an individual case basis. Marriage counselling can also help you figure out what you need to or want to do next.
    Outside of seeking professional help, a few things you could stay mindful of would be:

    • Indulge in self care. This news must have shocked you to your core, and of course, would be very hurtful. In such instances, it becomes important to prioritise your mental and emotional wellbeing. You can do so by: making sure you’re taking good care of your food and sleep (as much as possible), seeking support from someone you trust to not judge and allowing yourself to feel your emotions.
    • Remind yourself that there is no right or wrong way to feel. Your feelings are valid.
    • It would be best to establish some boundaries so you can process this enough to think further. Whether that be space and time away from your husband, or reassurance from him.
    • Consider personal therapy as well, if marriage counselling is not an option, as therapy could help you process and sort through these complex emotions. It can also help you tackle the new uncertainty surrounding your and your daughter’s future.
    • Make sure you don’t blame yourself for this. There may have been some problems in your marriage prior to cheating, but those in no way excuse such behaviour.

    There are many couples who choose to stay together and work things out after infidelity, and come out stronger on the other side. The couples who make through have strong reasons for doing so: they love each other, they love their family and they’re good friends. Reasons stemming from guilt and shame usually don’t hold the marriage together and eventually give rise to resentment. Keeping the marriage together also takes a fair deal of effort from both partners in order to rebuild trust and friendship in the relationship.

    So, instead of questioning what you should do, ask yourself if you have it in you to rebuild your marriage and if your husband can provide what you need to make this marriage work. Inversely, it is also important to address if you can provide what he needs.

    Your concern for your daughter is well-placed and completely understandable. While it is not right or possible to hide it completely from her that there are problems between her parents, you can take care of a few things to ensure her well-being through this challenging behavior.

    • Encourage open communication by letting your daughter know that you want to create a safe space for her, and that she could ask you any questions she may have. Children are often more intelligent and perceptive than we give them credit for. Your daughter may be harboring her own questions and worries and needs a safe space to express with her parents.
    • Keep in mind to share an age-appropriate explanation with her and avoid giving her too many details which may cloud her understanding. Open communication does not mean you need to share every detail with her. Just what she needs to know.
    • Make sure to reassure her that regardless of what happens between the parents, you and your husband both love her very much. In front of your daughter, it is important to present as a united front. One thing you would share in common with your husband would be concern for your daughter’s well-being. Children often blame themselves for their parents’ problems.
    • Try to provide as much stability in routine for her as possible. If her routine gets uprooted for any reason, ensure that she is receiving adequate attention and support from you, other family and even her school.
    • Take care of yourself so you can be emotionally available– to take care of your daughter. If you are not well emotionally, it will get displaced onto your child, and she has done nothing to deserve that. So, if it is hard to look after for your own sake, do it for your daughter.
    • If you are still concerned, consider arranging a meeting with a child psychologist to cater to your daughter’s emotional and psychological needs.

    FAQs

    1.⁠ ⁠If my husband cheated with a man, does that mean he’s gay?

    Not necessarily. Sexual orientation is complex and can’t be determined solely based on a single incident or behavior.
    If your husband engaged in a sexual encounter with another man, it may indicate that he has some level of attraction to men, but it doesn’t necessarily mean that he identifies as gay. People can have experiences or behaviors that don’t align with their sexual orientation or identity, and there can be various reasons for engaging in such behavior, including curiosity, experimentation, or other personal factors.

    2. How to know if my husband is bisexual?

    It’s crucial to have open and honest communication with your husband about your feelings, concerns, and questions regarding the situation. Seeking support from a therapist or counsellor who is knowledgeable about issues related to sexual orientation and infidelity can also be helpful in navigating this complex and sensitive topic. Ultimately, only your husband can determine and disclose his sexual orientation and identity, and it’s essential to approach the situation with empathy, understanding, and respect for both yourself and your husband.

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  • 7 Cosas Ridículas que no hay que decir a gente Bisexual

    7 Cosas Ridículas que no hay que decir a gente Bisexual

    A lo largo de los años he sido objeto de muchas observaciones bifóbicas.

    La bifobia no es solo una expresión específica de homofobia para las personas que son “parcialmente” gays. La bifobia viene de la comunidad queer y heterosexual, y en mi experiencia, es una expresión del pensamiento y/o binario que puede ser muy destructivo para nuestro mundo en muchas maneras. Las que voy a exponer a continuación ni siquiera son las peores, solo son las más reveladoras de los perjuicios escondidos que hay contra las personas bi.

    Algunas personas dicen que “pansexual” es la identidad de elección si te atraen personas sin que te importe el sexo o el género, y por lo tanto rechazan el género binario. Abordo esta cuestión más adelante, y afirmo por qué me defino todavía como bisexual y no pansexual, mientras desafío el género binario. “Queer” puede ser también en término paraguas para la comunidad LGBTQ+, o puede ser un término más radical para una posición que desafía la heteronormatividad.  

    1. “Yo también fui bisexual una vez”

    A lo mejor para algunas personas su identidad se siente más estable en una categoría diferente a “bisexual” y pertenecer a una etiqueta diferente es ahora su preferida. Pero decir algo así es muy condescendiente e inválido. Una mujer identificada como lesbiana actualmente me lo dijo en el Club Lexington hace unos diez años. Estoy seguro de que la gente lo sigue diciendo, y hay que pararlo.  Sé que he sido bisexual desde los 16 años, y todavía soy bisexual. Me honra cómo me identifico. Punto final.

    1. “¿Pero qué pasa con la monogamia?”

    Nada en contra del poliamor, que es una identidad legítima también. Pero la bisexualidad no significa no-monógamo. Bisexual significa muchas cosas diferentes para muchas personas diferentes, algunos de los cuales son monógamos, y otros son poli. Enfrentar bi y poli es simplemente inadecuado.

    More Radical Reads: Los 4 modos in los que la ‘no-monogamia’ me ha ayudado ha sentirme mas segura y comoda en las relaciones romanticas

    3.“¿No refuerza la palabra bisexual el género binario?”

    Este asunto ha tenido mucha cola en el blog. Un gran artículo para releer para una exploración más profunda de este tópico tan complejo es:  Words, Binary, and Biphobia: Or Why “Bi” is Binary but “FTM” is Not.  Por ahora, me gustaría aprovechar la oportunidad para salir como un bisexual de género queer, y por lo tanto detonar todos sus contraargumentos por el mero hecho de mi existencia.  

    1. “Me da miedo salir con bisexuales porque creo que me dejarán por otro con un cuerpo diferente al mío.”

    No dejes que tu inseguridad arruine una relación potencialmente fabulosa con algo tan bisexual.  ¡Sabes que la bifobia es tan maliciosa que yo mismo que soy un orgulloso bisexual y lo he sido durante años, pero ahora tengo una relación con otro bisexual y estos miedo afloran en mi cerebro! La gente tiene un montón de prejuicios contra los bisexuales por cómo son tratados en el mundo de la cultura y los medios, el mayor de ellos es el mito de que somos incapaces de satisfacer sexualmente con una pareja o que negamos nuestra actual sexualidad.  Esto es específicamente bifobia y no homofobia porque el miedo de las “dos” realidades de existencia bisexual y viene de gente gay y hetero, y como he mencionado ¡de bisexuales también! Así que no te sientas mal si tienes inseguridad o miedo. Nuestra cultura es bifóbica, así que asimilarlo tiene sentido, justo como asimilar el sexismo u otro ismo tiene sentido.

    Incluso yo, que he estado reuniéndome en contra de la mierda durante años, sucumbo a veces. Estate vigilante y deshace tu bifobia interiorizada. Míralo como un acto de resistencia contra una parte fea de una cultura dominante, justo como deberías deshacer otras varias internalizaciones.

    5.“¿Pero a quién prefieres realmente? ¿Con quién crees que acabarás?”

    Un hombre gay me preguntó una vez esto, curioseando en varios niveles de mi atracción física contra la afinidad emocional hacia hombres y mujeres, por último intentando adivinar con su bola de cristal la respuesta de con quién acabaré, como si mi futura felicidad fuera más incierta que la suya y necesitara su consejo. Me preguntó por quién me sentía más sexualmente atraído, si a hombres o a mujeres. ¿Mi respuesta? Depende. ¿Con quién tengo más magnetismo? Si con hombres o mujeres. ¿Mi respuesta? Depende. El hecho de que mi deseo y vínculo emocional tenga alguna complejidad no significa que sea menos válido y sus capas no significan soledad para mi u otra persona con mi particular clase de atracción.

    6.“Intuyo que le das a todos los palos ¿no?”

    Argggg.  Todo lo que mueve el argumento. Me siento atraído por la personalidad de las personas más que por su apariencia física, aunque sienta lujuria. Hay mucha gente con la que nunca querría liarme por su comportamiento, actitud, creencias, etc. Siento que mis preferencias sexuales y románticas están muy discriminadas, pero yo no discrimino. Con esto quiero decir que distingo de quien quiero ser con ciertos estándares de compatibilidad y deseo, pero también que no corro a juzgar sobre con quién debería emparejarme basándome en su sexo asignado de nacimiento o su género.

    More Radical Reads: Four Terrible Bisexuality Tropes on TV, and Four Portrayals That Defy Them

    7.“Si te van todos los géneros, ¿por qué no dices que eres pansexual o queer?”

    Escribí un artículo: “Queer vs. Bi: Why I’m Coming Back Around to Bisexual” . Brevemente—pansexual y queer son probablemente más precisos para mí en sus estrictas definiciones, pero me gusta usar “bisexual” porque es una palabra con una importancia histórica y también actual en el mundo hetero, en el cual puede ser usada. También creo que la gente puede alejarse de “bi” dentro de la comunidad LGBTQ por la bifobia, y esto tiene que parar.

    [Imagen de portada: una foto con dos personas sentadas en una cama. La persona de la izquierda tiene el pelo corto y lleva gafas, un top azul encima de una camiseta blanca y pantalones rojos oscuros. La persona de la derecha tiene el pelo oscuro, gafas, un collar naranja, un top gris y pantalones verdes. Están sonriendo y sus cabezas se inclinan a la izquierda. Fuente: Mushpa Y Mensa]


    TBINAA is an independent, queer, Black woman run digital media and education organization promoting radical self love as the foundation for a more just, equitable and compassionate world. If you believe in our mission, please contribute to this necessary work at PRESSPATRON.com/TBINAA 

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    Liz Green

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