Anonymous wrote:Bisexuality isn't always 50/50. Maybe she's mostly attracted to men and only somewhat attracted to women. Since she has been in relationships with men since she was young, she hasn't really had time to think about other options. And "Anna" is the first woman who caught her attention at a time that she was available.
Also, in our society, being straight is the default option. If your friend didn't have a strong attraction to women to begin with and haven't met a woman that she was attracted to (until "Anna"), why would she even think about women romantically?
The whole situation also sounds like a mid-life crisis. So that's a possibility too.
Anonymous wrote:
I have two friends who became lesbians
after they were traumatized by rape.
They don't know each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sexuality can be fluid for many people.
It is VERY possible she was only attracted to men for the first part of her life and was extremely in love with her male husband.
She happened to fall in love with a woman later in life.
It is what it is. If she wants to call herself a lesbian, have at it. Maybe technically she’s bisexual or maybe she was heterosexual and now she’s gay. Who cares.
Is she happy? That’s what matters. People are complicated.
-Lifelong lesbian
+1
Anonymous wrote:Sexuality can be fluid for many people.
It is VERY possible she was only attracted to men for the first part of her life and was extremely in love with her male husband.
She happened to fall in love with a woman later in life.
It is what it is. If she wants to call herself a lesbian, have at it. Maybe technically she’s bisexual or maybe she was heterosexual and now she’s gay. Who cares.
Is she happy? That’s what matters. People are complicated.
-Lifelong lesbian