I myself experience sexual attraction to both masculine and feminine people, leaning strongly toward feminine, but I have a hard time imagining myself being with a binary man. It feels a bit awkward to identify as a bi woman sometimes because my sexual attraction for men just kind of exists, yet I don’t feel entirely comfortable identifying as a lesbian for the same reason. I just learned about the bi-lesbian flag/identity and it feels more right to me because I don’t want to erase by bisexuality, even if I never choose to act on my sexual attraction to men. Curious what others think.


Same, I don’t really want to alienate lesbians for whom that is an important distinction. But … on the other hand, I’ve never slept with a man and don’t plan to, so … I dunno, sometimes I feel like it’s not that crazy to identify as a lesbian when that’s at least how I exist in a social sense. (Though, a lot of times my partner and I are viewed as two straight women - people will assume we’re relatives or roommates rather than lovers. So even getting to the point of being viewed as lesbians is a struggle sometimes.)
Also, there is so much drama and toxicity about men in some of these “militant lesbian” spaces, like the idea of “gold star” lesbians, the idea that a lesbian is somehow “less” of a lesbian if they have ever slept with a man. I tend to just experience a lot of this as unnecessarily alienating to both actual lesbians and bisexual women. Like, get over yourself - women are subject to heteronormativity like everyone else, not everyone is equally privileged with access to tools of interpretation to understand their sexuality, and many of us have been coerced into heterosexual relationships by church, family, and society. Let’s not shit on other queer women, please. (Not to in any way diminish the legitimate hurt some lesbians feel when they’re cheated on by their partner with a man, for example - but then the focus probably belongs on the sexual immorality rather than the gender.)
I don’t think it came from an overly literal interpretation, instead I think it was around when pansexual as a term came out to indicate openness to dating trans people that some bisexuals were starting to intentionally use the term to specify they weren’t open to dating trans people, so … bisexual became more associated with transphobia during that time, but I think there was a big backlash and now we just ignore that transphobic use of the term. I tend to think of bisexual as not literally meaning “attracted to two genders / sexes” but more just being a general-use umbrella term for sexual orientations that don’t fall on either extreme of homo- or hetero-sexual.
theoretically I would be open to dating non-queer people, but … yeah, the only non-queer option for me is also cishet men. I think there probably are men out there who I would want to date, maybe even cishet men, but … I dunno, I don’t see it as likely.