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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (366952)1/15/2008 12:41:38 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1571055
 
She wasn't a lesbian. As for her being bisexual, I knew it when I married her.

She prefers women.....that's right......but she married a man. Doesn't sound like she's immune to the thinking of the general society.

She didn't prefer women, she liked both and was enthusiastic about both. I doubt she's changed. You don't grasp the bisexual concept.

Its more likely she isn't too committed to anyone but herself. But that opinion only comes from knowing her.

And of course you know her well..............


Yep.



To: tejek who wrote (366952)1/18/2008 9:42:21 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1571055
 
Bisexuality is a Distinct Sexual Orientation

Here's a little sex education for ya. Course I told ya already.

Results from a 10-year study show that bisexuality in women is not a transitional phase enroute to lesbianism, but rather a distinct and long-term sexual orientation.


In 2005 a paper in Psychological Science debunked the idea that men have bisexual attraction (they’re either gay or straight the study concluded). Ok, still up for debate.

But what about women? Does bisexuality legitimately exist in women?

This week the American Psychological Association published the first longitudinal study of female bisexuality. Dr. Lisa Diamond studied 79 women over a 10-year period, in an attempt to define female bisexuality.

She found no evidence for the commonly held view that bisexuality is an experimental phase, enroute to lesbianism or heterosexuality.

Rather she found that bisexuality in women is a distinct and consistent sexual orientation.

Interestingly, she also found that as women age, they become more aware of their sexual fluidity, and thus tend to turn more toward bisexuality than away from it.

And check this out: even though bisexuals continue to be attracted to both sexes as they age, they are more likely than heterosexuals or lesbians, to settle into monogamous relationships.

Hm. The more fluid you are sexually, the more stable you become behaviorally.
What’s up with that?

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