People who did not identify as either a man or a woman or who identified as transgender could not be analyzed separately. Note: The sample size of bisexual adults is too small to analyze men and women or other demographic subgroups separately. Among bisexuals, 40% reported in 2013 that they had ever been subject to slurs or jokes and 31% said they had been rejected by a friend or family member because they were bisexual. Just 8% of LGBT adults felt there was a lot of social acceptance of bisexual men, while 46% said there was only a little or no social acceptance for this group. The 2013 survey also found that LGBT adults said that bisexual men faced less social acceptance than bisexual women, gay men and lesbians. Meanwhile, all the respondents in the survey who identified as straight were in opposite-sex relationships, and nearly all (94%) of those who identified as gay or lesbian were in same-sex relationships. This is likely due at least in part to the fact that LGB adults make up a small share of the overall adult population, so the pool of potential same-sex partners is much smaller than the pool of opposite-sex partners.
Still, most (81%) are attracted solely to the same gender while 14% are attracted mostly to the same gender.Īmong people with partners, many more bisexual adults are married or in a relationship with someone of the opposite sex than are with someone of the same sex – 88% say this. Gays and lesbians are somewhat less likely to report being solely attracted to one gender. A similar share (40%) say they are attracted mostly to the opposite gender and 4% report feeling attracted only to the opposite gender, while 12% and 1%, respectively, say they are attracted mostly or only to their own gender.Īmong people who identify as straight or heterosexual, the vast majority (96%) say they are attracted only to the opposite gender, and a small share (3%, mostly made up of women) say they are mostly attracted to the opposite gender. Roughly four-in-ten adults who describe themselves as bisexual (43%) say they are sexually attracted to men and women equally. Among those who did come out, bisexual adults report somewhat different experiences from gays and lesbians. Many bisexuals say they haven’t come out to their parents because they didn’t feel it was important to tell them or the subject never came up, according to the Center’s 2013 survey of LGBT adults. The experience of coming out to friends and family can be complex. Roughly half of those who are bisexual (54%) are out to some or only a few people. About one-quarter of bisexual adults (26%) are not “out” to any of the important people in their lives, compared with 4% of gay and lesbian adults. In contrast, 75% of gay and lesbian adults say the same. Only 19% of those who identify as bisexual say all or most of the important people in their lives are aware of their sexual orientation. Bisexuals, who account for about four-in-ten LGBT adults in the United States, stand apart from gay and lesbian adults in many ways, such as the fact that they are less likely to view their sexual orientation as central to their identity.īisexual adults are much less likely than gays and lesbians to be “out” to the important people in their lives, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of recently released survey data from Stanford University. (David McNew/Getty Images)Īs the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community celebrates Pride Month in June, bisexual Americans are becoming more and more visible. Dealing with gender dysphoria and all this?where people are disrespecting your pronouns by using your birth?pronouns or by using your pronouns in an rude way is just too much to deal with at a young age.Marchers carry a bisexual pride flag in the 2013 LA Pride Parade in West Hollywood, California. If she says "this girl" she would correct herself by saying "this they" or "this it" sarcastically which is rude by itself. I'm also ending a friendship with a girl that I used to be friends with not because she keeps mis-gendering me but with how she corrects herself. I'm scared of telling my mother about my friend because she is the one who is oppressing my original?on me and she would probably force me to not be friends with him anymore.
I also have a friend who is also going through the same things because his (he did a transition from FtM) parents are transphobic. I am a non-binary but being forced to stay as my birth?which is uncomfortable because it's causing my gender dysphoria to grow even more (I've had gender dysphoria for a long time, and no my parents are not transphobic, they are just telling me to wait until I am older since I am still too "young" to decide that for myself ).