- Date posted
- 1y
Bisexuality and OCD
For someone like me, a cis-gender, African-American, feminine, man who identifies as bisexual, it made growing up partly confusing and frustrating. I dealt with everyone’s opinion of me since before I could remember. My feminine traits made my peers ridicule me. I was called the f-slur, gay, etc. These terms were used to describe me before I even knew what sexuality and any of those words meant. As children, who haven’t yet been tainted by the world, we are confident of what we know of ourselves. We were naive, but we were happy. As a result I was sure of my attraction to girls as a kid and when someone would accuse me of being gay i responded saying I was “straight” not yet realizing my attraction to men. During this time I didn’t know I had ocd (despite my symptoms at such an early age) and it wouldn’t come in to impact my sex life till I was in high school and had my first strong attraction towards a guy in my class. He was perfect to me and I was so infatuated by him. I wanted to know all about him, talk to him, stare at him, and imagined life with him. It was at this time I realized I was bisexual, as I still liked women. Sometime later after high school I started to obsess over my sexuality. I was doubting myself despite my attractions. Allowing the doubts of all those people who told me, “I was gay” or “going through a phase” get to me. I would then grow to fear I would not be who I am and that I would live a life that wasn’t authentic to me. I feared ending up with a woman or man and I would hate my life with them and do something to myself that I could never take back. I would wonder if I would take my life, hurt the person I was with, or just live in regret forever because I couldn’t “pick a side”, a saying so commonly heard by bisexual people. It wasn’t until reading someone’s stories with ocd who installed the realization within me that what I was experiencing (the constant rumination of my sexuality and my future) one of the many subtypes of ocd, sexual orientation ocd. Hearing her story and how her experience was so similar to mine made me see that I am not alone. There is no such thing as picking a side. According to a thetrevorproject.org, it was mentioned by bisexual advocate Robyn Och, “bisexuality is, “The potential to be attracted — romantically and/or sexually — to people of more than one sex and/or gender, not necessarily at the same time, not necessarily in the same way, and not necessarily to the same degree.” This was the perfect way to word how it feels to be a bisexual. There is no right way or wrong way to feel an attraction, and that way of feeling attraction looks different for all of us. To anyone struggling with Sexual Orientation OCD, whether you are bisexual, straight, gay, or anything. You are unique and your feelings are true. There is no right way to love. Finally, you must learn to love yourself so you can in turn love somebody else. Thankyou if you read all of that haha.