Today is
Celebrate Bisexuality Day, a day that had its origins 30 years ago in 1990 when
people met in San Francisco to discuss how people who are bisexual are often
left out of discussions and celebrations about sexuality.
More than 450
people attended from 20 U.S. states and 5 other countries, and the mayor of San
Francisco sent a proclamation “commending the bisexual rights community for its
leadership in the cause of social justice,” and declaring June 23, 1990,
Bisexual Pride Day.
It would be
until 1999 that September 23rd would be branded Celebrate Bisexuality Day,
an proclamation was made at the 1999 International Gay and Lesbian
Association Conference in Johannesburg. The idea for the day was put forward by
bisexual activists Wendy Curry of Maine, Michael Page of Florida,
and Gigi Raven Wilbur of Texas.
Wilbur
previous spoke about the need for the day by explaining how easy it is to not
recognise bisexual people.
“Ever since
the Stonewall rebellion, the gay and lesbian community
has grown in strength and visibility. The bisexual community also has grown in
strength but in many ways we are still invisible. I too have been conditioned
by society to automatically label a couple walking hand in hand as
either straight or gay, depending upon the perceived gender of each
person.”
Increasingly
society is beginning to understand the sexuality occurs on a spectrum and may
change throughout a person’s life. We’re moving away from putting people in
specific boxes, and assigning labels to other people.
The 2019 Youth
Risk Behaviour Study conducted by the USA’s Centre for Disease Control looked
into how younger people defined their sexuality, and found that increasingly
younger people are identifying as being bisexual. At the same time there has
been an improvement in the number of bisexual character appearing in television
programs and films, and we’re moving away from incorrectly depicting
bisexuality as being a road stop on the way to a single gender sexual
preference.
Today is a day
for all of us to think about how we can make sure bisexuality is not being
eased, that people’s stories are equally shared, that support services are
welcoming, and that individually our own comments and actions are not causing
discrimination.
SOURCE: OUT IN PERTH
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