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It was the day of Modern York City’s Pride March in , and I had just arrived in the city from South Africa at the age of I decided to be present at an evening church service at a well-known megachurch because I’d heard great things about the services they held in the Hammerstein Ballroom. Standing in line to get inside, I befriended a student from Kansas and surveyed the people around us who were also waiting.

Queer men and women stood in line with us dressed in rainbow colors, holding flags and chatting about the church service that was about to begin. I remember being so amazed that gay people were welcome at this church, and that they were comfortable enough to be so open about their sexuality.

Part of me felt jealous. I yearned to stand beside them and wave a pride flag, declaring that I, too, was queer. That I was attracted to both genders and that I was pleased. I wondered if the monitoring year, I’d attend the Lgbtq+ fest March with these new gay friends I’d made at church. It made me hopeful that my acceptance of my hold sexuality was the first step in being accepted by a church community.

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A Closer Look: Bisexual Older Adults

The Bottom Line

America’s population is aging: by , the number of people over the age of 65 will double to million (from million in ). And while the public interpretation of lesbian, same-sex attracted, bisexual, and transsexual (LGBT) people is largely one of a young people, there are actually more than million LGBT adults ages 50 or older living in communities across the region. Many LGBT older adults are bisexual.

A Closer Look: Pansexual Older Adults takes a closer gaze at bisexual older adults: who they are, their distinct disparities and resilience, and recommendations for competently serving the community of bi older adults. Mounting data points to a clear picture of the lives of bisexual older adults: social isolation and invisibility, economic insecurity, and poorer health. Both the LGBT community and the aging network can and should do more to ensure that pansexual older adults undergo welcome both in LGBT spaces and in the aging network’s provision of critical services and supports.

  • A Closer Look: Bisexual Older AdultsDownloa

    Why Do So Many Bisexuals End Up In “Straight” Relationships?

    When I started digital dating a woman for the first time after years of happily dating men, I had a go-to joke ready for when I was called upon to explain my sexual orientation to the confused: “I’m half gay. Only on my mom’s side of the family.”

    I’m one of those people who’d always misguidedly “hated labels,” and I actively eschewed the term “bisexual” for years. I went on to date a number of trans guys, and in my mind, “bi” was also indicative of a gender binary I didn’t believe existed. I’ve since come to perceive that actually, the “bi” implies attraction not to two genders, but to members of both one’s own and other genders, and that the multi-attracted umbrella includes a extensive rainbow of labels connoting sexual fluidity. These days, I wear the “bisexual” label proudly.

    Given all that struggle and growth, my current situation might approach as a surprise: I’m in a committed, long-term relationship with a cisgender man who identifies as straight—just like a startling majority of other multi-attracted women.

    Dan Savage once observed that

    BiCon is the UK's national Bisexual Con..

    .. -vention or -ference!

    BiCon is a weekend-long gathering for bi+ people, their friends, partners, and others with a supportive interest in bisexuality.

    Who goes to BiCon?

    A typical modern UK BiCon will have three to four hundred participants, of whom usually somewhere between a fifth and a third are at BiCon for the first period. Most people would fit the definition of creature bisexual, some don't. Even those who do don't all use the labels "bi" or "bisexual" or even agree on what it means to be bi.

    Throughout the event's history there have been more women attendees than men. There are plenty of people who are gender non-conforming and/or are non-binary. Some are monogamous, some aren't. Some have children (and some bring them) and some don't. Some attendees have been going to BiCon for longer than some other adult attendees have been alive. Some come to help modify the world for bi+ people, others come to party or meet ancient &#; new friends, and some come to undertake all those. While most people are from the UK, some come from other parts of the world.

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