First off, do you have to bring up transgender children into a discussion about adults? Do people seriously need to make every single thread about queer people a debate on the legitimacy of trans people? Second, what you said isn't what the quote says. It's literally the opposite of what you said. They identify as genderqueer and present as cis because it's so hard to live and present as a visibly trans person in the world. Living and presenting as a cis adult is the easiest thing in the world. |
Maybe not disowned by families but I know many poly people who’s families will only recognize one partner/refuse to acknowledge any other relationships. I’m poly but am not out to my family because it wouldn’t be worth the drama. I don’t consider poly to be queer but lots of poly people are also queer (not cisgender heterosexual). I’m bisexual and I don’t think my marriage to a man should erase that, but for many people it does (unless I’m actively on a date with a woman, I’m just a straight lady to them.) |
That’s not a straight couple. |
For sure, I know a lot of queer people that are poly and for whatever reason there seems to be a lot of poly trans people in particular. Your marriage does not erase your queer identity. I've heard others in the queer community say things that were essentially bi-erasure and i hate that. If anyone should be accepting of other's identities, it should be us since we are so often rejected. |
Thank you for this. It’s spot on. As a bisexual woman married to a man, people assume I’m straight and I don’t usually feel comfortable claiming queerness even at an event like pride, where the whole point is to celebrate all types of experiences. I’d also like to remind people that sexuality is a spectrum and being bisexual doesn’t have only mean 50/50 attraction to both genders. There are plenty of bisexual/pan sexual people who tend to have stronger attraction to one gender but it doesn’t mean they aren’t attracted to others. Like, if your type as a straight woman is brunette nerds that doesn’t mean you aren’t occaisonally going to find the blonde jock hot and have a fling. There’s also a difference between romantic and sexual preference; someone may prefer romantic relationships with women but enjoy sex with men, or vice versa. If a couple I otherwise perceived as cisgender and straight identified as queer, I would assume one or both are not 100% heterosexual and not that they are trying to claim it attention. Circles where being queer is the “cool” thing are still incredibly limited. Yes, if your friends are all gender studies professors in a blue city maybe it’s more cool to be queer. But the vast majority of us do not live in that bubble, and our older family members, work colleagues, etc, don’t find queer to be “cool” and even if they accept it, there are implicit biases at play. I would assume people identifying as queer are doing so because it is authentic for them and not to unlock some some theoretical benefits of queerness. |
| I’m a lesbian trapped in a mans body. 😁 |
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Wow. I'm surprised that there are so many people who unapologetically question somebody else's identity.
Ashley Ford, an author, is a bisexual woman married to a man. She says that people tell her all the time she can't be queer because of this. She just said in this bemused tone, "they don't get to tell me my sexuality. I'm the one who knows that that, not them." I come from a conservative religious background and have lots of friends who came out as bi later in life. A lot of them said that they thought that all women were attracted to other women like they were, but they just did some mental gymnastics to convince themselves that their attraction didn't mean they were actually bisexual. Many of them have gotten divorced and are in relaitnships with women. |
Ah, the rules of queerhood. |
The intersectionalism rooted deep within in LGBTQIA+ identity politics will not allow for this supposed big open tent of acceptance. |
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| I miss the days when people’s sex lives were considered a private matter. |
That's when people had a life outside social media. |
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I just found out one of my closest childhood friends, a female married to a male, is queer. How did I learn this? Her Twitter profile, of course.
I don't really care how she is queer, or why. I just think that is absurd. We talk about once a week. I've known her for more than forty years. I have opinions I'd never share with her about how silly that seems to me. I have also, I am fairly sure, led a much more smorgasbord of a sex life than she ever has... But I don't consider myself to be queer. |
It’s identifying into a group. Human beings crave belonging to a community. In the absence of clans or religion or even bowling leagues, we’ve turned sexual identity and orientation into groups that provide a sense of belonging. And if you’re not actually gay, just call yourself queer and you can join too. |
For many of us, our friends are our family. That’s why we have the term chosen family. I don’t know a single queer adult that didn’t lose people when they came out. Coming out as a bi woman married to a cishet man on twitter is fine. I refuse to erase bi women in hetero marriages. That’s still a valid queer identity. Straight people constantly claim that bi men are just closeted gay me. And bi women are just doing it for attention. Bi people are real. I consider myself pansexual and I’m married. My sexuality isn’t invalidated just because I’m monogamous. |