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  • Cara Delevingne, Miley Cyrus, and even Johnny Depp’s Daughter Lily-Rose recently revealed

  • they are something other than straight. Hmm all ladies, just a coincidence or are women

  • more likely to be bisexual?

  • Human sexuality is stranger than what our culture tells us. Alfred Kinsey was one of

  • the early pioneers to realize this. His famous 1-5 scale is still widely used nearly 70 years

  • later. Kinsey identified as bisexual and believed most people fall somewhere in the middle too.

  • While 2015 has been a huge year for advances in LGBT rights, bisexuality still remains

  • an enigma to much of America. Some consider it a phase on the way to admitting homosexuality

  • or just a way to get attention or have fun in college for women.

  • And those misunderstandings and stereotypes might do some real damage to bisexuals. Only

  • 28% of bisexuals are out, compared to over 70% of gays and lesbians, according to a 2013

  • Pew Research Center survey. So low visibility might be a reason why myths about bisexuality

  • are so hard to dispel. But let me reassure you, the latest research says female bisexuality

  • is very real.

  • Many studies show that women are more likely to say theyre bisexual than men. A recent

  • study from the American Sociological Association found that to be true. Researchers followed

  • 5,018 women and 4,191 men from adolescence to young adulthood. The study asked participants

  • whether they had same sex attractions or sexual experiences in the past year. And women did

  • have a higher probability of being attracted to both men and women.

  • Earlier studies seem to find that women in general are just more likely to be attracted

  • to both sexes. One early study, when I say early I mean 2003, found that women both heterosexual

  • and homosexual were aroused by both male and female erotica.

  • And a 2008 study published in the journal Developmental Psychology also demonstrated

  • self disclosed fluidity in non-heterosexual women. But perhaps more importantly, this

  • study also found that fluid sexuality isn’t just a phase.

  • The survey of 79 queer women found that bisexual women maintained their attraction to both

  • men and women over the course of ten years. But still bisexual women and women who didn’t

  • label themselves were more likely than lesbians to change their label. But mostly it was a

  • change between bisexual, and unlabeled than it was to lesbian or heterosexual. Only 8%

  • of women changed their identity to lesbian or heterosexual.

  • So think of the Kinsey scale. Sexuality is a spectrum, where most people fall in the

  • middle; certainly a lot of women do. But unfortunately, social biases codify attraction.

  • The ASA study also found that social context matters a lot when it comes to female sexuality.

  • Women who were rated as more attractive by their interviewers (there’s a big old asterisk

  • here), had higher levels of education and avoid young motherhood, were more more likely

  • to rate themselves as “100% heterosexual”.

  • The researchers think maybe romantic options could influence a woman’s sexual identity.

  • Even if she feels attraction to more than one gender, a more attractive woman would

  • have better heterosexual options simply might make her less likely to explore her homosexual

  • options. And on the other side of that coin, maybe that women who have had same sex experiences

  • are more likely to incorporate that attraction into their identities.

  • But the question a lot of people ask, is why did homosexuality, or in this case bisexuality

  • evolve? One of the most prominent theories is that like bonobos, we bone to bond. Because

  • sex feels good and is very intimate, it could help create and strengthen social bonds.

  • As for female same sex bonds, one study published in the journal Evolutionary Psychology, puts

  • forward the idea that bisexuality helps women raise their young. For example if a father

  • dies a woman could form an intimate partnership with another woman. That extra set of hands

  • could help ensure that child reaches adulthood.

  • Maybe well never know thereasonfor bisexuality. But really at the end of

  • the day, bisexuality is real. Science says so. People say so. People are aroused by and

  • attracted to lots of different things. And that’s okay. And that’s beautiful.

  • For a more in-depth look at female sexuality, check out this video I did with Dr. Kiki Sanford:

  • Weve got a link in the description below if youre on mobile.

Cara Delevingne, Miley Cyrus, and even Johnny Depp’s Daughter Lily-Rose recently revealed

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