![]() Ultimately, there’s no right or wrong way to be bi-it can, and does, look different for different people. ![]() ![]() Gabrielle Alexa Noel is a bisexual writer, founder of Bi Girls Club, and author of How to Live With the Internet (And Not Let It Ruin Your Life). Natasha Camille, LCSW, is a family and couples therapist and founder of Wildest Dreams Therapy, a private practice serving BIPOC and LGBTQ+ clients in New York and New Jersey. Jesse Kahn, LCSW-R, CST, is a sex therapist and the director of the Gender & Sexuality Therapy Center in New York City. Meet the Experts: Wendasha Jenkins Hall, PhD, is a sex educator and researcher based in Atlanta, Georgia. “A person who identified as straight can discover they have a sexual attraction to other genders in their 40s.” Similarly, you might identify as gay, lesbian, or pansexual before deciding that the “bisexual” label suits you best. “Sexuality can change over our lifetime,” says Wendasha Jenkins Hall, PhD, a sex educator and researcher based in Atlanta, Georgia. But for others, it’s a little trickier, especially since the way you experience attraction- and who you’re attracted to-can evolve. Of course, for some people, being bisexual can feel as obvious as being a Pisces or having brown hair. Labels can be helpful, affirming… and, welp, confusing, especially when you’re trying to identify something as nuanced, personal, and amorphous as your sexuality.
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