That Time I Got Trapped In Labels

A character is surrounded by 4 labels, as follows. Label 1 states, hello my label is bisexual. Label 2 states, hello my label is lesbian. Label 3 states, hello my label is gay. Label 4 states, hello my label is queer.

Hey gang! Today I’m talking identity labels: The good, the bad, and the hardships of label navigation. Here is my (ever-changing?) label story.

When discovering more about my sexuality, I spent a lot of time contemplating attraction and weighing different attractions against each other. I reflected on past experiences constantly, even though they were extremely limited. By the time I was 19, I had never dated anyone, never really done anything sexually. But there were boys in my life that I felt attracted to on varying levels.

Actually, when it came down to dissecting physical attraction and emotional (or romantic) attraction to boys, it became very simple and obvious to me. I’ve experienced sexual attraction with one boy, and emotional attraction with one boy. (Not the same boy!) Plain and simple, I’ve been attracted to boys at two points in my life.

Then the girls—another story entirely. Shortly after realizing that I was Not A Hetero, I started seeing girls for the first time. Like really allowing myself to feel the way I’ve always felt. Being able to look at a girl and think “This is the most beautiful, ethereal being I have ever seen in my entire life. My world is complete just from looking at her from this distance. That smile just cleared my acne, I think I need to lay down.” It did wonders for my own personal freedom. I finally let myself out of my isolating prison cell and, my god, this world has been so full of beautiful girls. How could I have been so blind?

My point here is, I could’ve looked at girls I walked by around campus and notice that I was sexually attracted to like, 1 out of every 5 girls I saw. (This might be an exaggeration.) (This might not be an exaggeration.)

I started looking back to friendships in my past. A lot of feelings resurfaced in ways that verified things my subconscious had known, but also in ways that made me feel like I was watching a sad teenage soap opera about myself. Wtf Jesse? You can’t be in love with HER?? SHE IS YOUR FRIEND! Or, You don’t even know her! Are you stupid?? Or, This girl is just honestly way out of your league wtf are you doing.

So, after all this, my Internet research I had given me the following information:

  • Bisexual: Attraction to men and women. (At the time, I had not known very much about nonbinary genders or felt the need to interpret this definition in any other way.)
  • Pansexual: Attraction to all genders. (Or regardless of gender.)
  • Gay/lesbian: Same-sex attraction.
  • Queer: ?? All of the above?
  • Also romantic attractions, such as homoromantic—meaning romantic/emotional attraction to same sex, but does not equate to sexual attraction. (But I’m not going to complicate this story with the exploration of these labels today. Maybe another time.)

With my gathering of evidence (attraction to two (2) boys and a very large sum (∞) of girls), I was definitely bisexual. I used that label in my head for a long time and felt it fitting me. I also learned lots more about it and adopted a definition that fit even better: attraction to two or more genders.

You see, around this time I went to an amateur drag show, and college kids were performing in drag (both drag queens and kings!) and I was like ~wow~ this attraction thing is WILD. So while I was learning more about gender and its spectrum, it became evident that my attraction was not limited to just men and women.

Plus, I’d become really hung up on the idea of not limiting myself. I’d think things like, If I come out as gay, what happens if I do fall in love with a boy? I was afraid that telling people I was gay could limit the way I experience attraction (to men) in the ways that thinking I was straight and being perceived as straight my whole life limited the ways I experienced attraction (to women). I just got freed from those limits; I didn’t want any more boundaries. At that time, I knew I could love anyone.

(Little side note: For me, I always felt like pansexual was love/attraction regardless of gender as if it wasn’t a factor at all. I knew I had a preference for girls, which is why I never felt like pan was fitting.)

So when I came out to my first round of people—my sister, my best friend, my roommates—I came out as bisexual, which often times coincided with a, “Btw bisexual means attraction to two or more genders and it’s not like a split 50/50 girls and boys.” And down the line, I came out to my brother, my parents, and all my Facebook friends in the same fashion.

I loved who I was. I loved being bi. I became a bisexual label warrior in my free time and made sure that people knew what it meant to me. I read a lot about bisexual stigmas in the wlw community. I defended the bisexual label against people who interpreted it as a trans-exclusionary identity. (You can still fall for trans people when you’re bi!!) I got outraged by the blatant biphobia in so many of my favorite queer shows (Orange is the New Black and The L Word, I’m looking at you.) I bought a bisexual pride flag and hung it on my wall. I hated how straight and gay people alike treated bisexuality like a stepping stone to becoming a lesbian or gay man.

Well, here we are four years later, and I have pretty much fulfilled that last stereotype.

After about the second year of dating my girlfriend, I felt really comfortable with myself. I loved girls; I loved that girl in particular. I stopped thinking over all these different scenarios and comparing amounts of attraction between genders a long time ago. Until I started analyzing again.

I think the definition for bisexuality is so ambiguous and there is a lot of people advocating (myself included) for a broad label here, that it’s hard to pass up. I came across so many bi-positive posts saying things like “You’re bi and valid if you’ve only dated one gender” or “You can still be bi and be attracted to women and nonbinary genders; you don’t have to be attracted to men to be bi.” And these things are true! However, I think they kept me from letting go of a label that wasn’t quite right for me anymore.

The truth is that I am weeks away from turning 23 years old and have never fallen in love with a man. I think to the future and long-ass scenarios of “what ifs” and could never see myself falling in love with a man. I think there was a single instance in my life that carried that potential, and a single instance of an experienced sexual attraction to a boy, both of which happened over 6 years ago. Not once have I ever looked at a man and thought “What sexy beast,” or whatever it is the man-lovers say. But I have looked at women countless times and had the equivalent reaction of “!!!!!!!!!fdka;jfdj!!”

I already came out to everyone as bisexual, but I stopped correcting people when they used “gay” instead. Anytime I talked about my girlfriend to someone who hadn’t already known, I didn’t clarify my label anymore. I took the bisexual flag off my wall. I distanced myself from the label slowly, which probably looked like nothing to anybody other than myself. For me, it was a long two years of letting go of the identity I’d only just created.

Where am I at with labels now? How do they match my attraction? The long-time-coming-conclusion settled into my identity journey fairly recently. Sexuality is fluid. Sexuality can change. After learning to love an identity that I ended up giving away, I understand the need for labels, but know how they can trap you too—even the label I thought would keep me free. I know my attraction can change, but I simply love women the most, and that makes me gravitate toward labels that express this now.

As you can tell by the title of this blog, I like the label lesbian, but I also use gay and queer. I feel especially drawn to queer because it implies more than same-sex attraction, getting back to the attraction to nonbinary genders. (Which is still true for me!) I’ve realized on this journey that I experience attraction for just about everyone, just not cismen. Since there’s not really a label that says “Down to love all y’all, except cis males!” Queer seems the fitting (and flexible because I’m still desperate to not lock myself into another trap).

Honestly though, I don’t use labels that much anymore. Labels and I have a love-hate thing going on, as you can tell. I also feel like sexual orientation labels are outdated by our concept of gender at this point and are in the process of being redefined across the queer alphabet board. But I’ll also save that for another post.

How do you feel about labels? Have they helped you? Hurt you? Y’all got that love-hate thing going with them too?? Let me know in the comments or DM me on twitter!

14 thoughts on “That Time I Got Trapped In Labels

  1. sorry, i just want to like-
    why is this so, SO similar to my own experience, just in a much longer time frame than my own?
    for about a year, i used the label bisexual. i knew that I loved girls, but I continued to use the experiences from the past of “crushes” i’d had on boys, that i realized later were just subconscious attempts to convince myself that i wasn’t gay- but that’s a whole separate story lmao. i finally came to terms with the fact that i wasn’t into guys a couple months ago. about the time i realized i was, and had been since we were ten, in love with my best friend.
    until he came out as trans.
    and i was like, “oh fk, i’m still in love with him.”
    so i finally psychoanalyzed myself into realizing that i was into… basically anyone other than cishet guys.
    most of my friends still know me as using the label lesbian, and i think I’m fine with that, but for now I’m just using the label queer.

    (also just wanna add that he and i are kinda-sorta-not-really-but-also-kinda-dating now. he told me that he loved me about a week ago, and there’s a lot going on that makes it really hard for us to be in a relationship. considering that we’re both minors and there are about two thousand miles between us. but. yknow.
    he’s going to come and visit me this spring break though! and I’m so excited!!
    anyways. yeah)
    sorry this got so long and overly detailed but- i don’t know. this really helped me sort through my own emotions and experiences so thank you ❤

    Liked by 1 person

  2. this is brilliant and I really enjoyed it! Thank you. I’ve really struggled with labels and with knowing “who I am” and trying to fit into a correct “description” of a certain sexuality. I’m trying to embrace the fact that attraction can change and I’m just going with that for now and it’s not an easy feat.

    Like

  3. When people ask how I identify, I usually don’t even give a straight answer (haha get it bc I’m not even straight anyways, gosh I love puns). This is a classic line I say when they ask, “Oh I don’t know, things can change, but I can say that I do like other women” and people (I say people but I’m literally talking about 2 people) have so far been good with that answer.

    Like

  4. This is super interesting, I’ve also been planning a post about labels for a while so it’s great to read your story. I felt very attached to labels early on, and went through all of them- initially bisexual, then lesbian, then gay, then pansexual. I found all of them had their own issues for me, I also found that other people mislabelled me a lot which was frustrating. I wished I didn’t have to label myself but I decided it was better for me to pick a label than for others to presume. So I found queer and I stuck with it- as you mentioned, it feels more genderless and open. Thanks for sparking some interesting thoughts about labels- That’s a little bit of my story with them!- AB

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes that is what I find too! That early on labels meant a lot more, but even when they mean less, I still want one because I don’t want other people to pick one for me. Thank you for sharing, I’ll keep an eye out for your post on the subject!!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Yes!!! Honestly that survey where I checked the “questioning” box (I’m pretty sure you read this post) was such an epiphany for me. I’m a big advocate for undecided checkboxes. (Also glad I nailed down the sexy beat comment 😂)

    Liked by 2 people

  6. I’ve found specific labels to be helpful for personal understanding and finding online communities. But when talking to other people I prefer to go broad and just say I’m queer. That way I don’t have to provide gender/sexuality 101; don’t have to get too personal; and don’t have to be limited by other people’s understanding of the more specific terms. It also means I can continue my personal journey without having to continually come out as a different label; I don’t have to box myself in.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Definitely agree! I think that’s what draws me to using the queer label so much. When talking about myself to the LGBTQIA+ community, I definitely use the queer label most often. Thanks for sharing!

      Like

Leave a comment