Bi males near me

  • I am an avid listener of Pansexual Behavior. I possess also listened to this excellent podcast but had not yet heard about the book. Your informative and reflection provoking work and conversation with Talia have me the incentive to acquire the book. I just ordered it! Keep up the bitacular work! Andrew Prescott

  • As a person who came out very late in life, this reveal was very vital initially. As of late, the host’s incessant self promotion and banal rambling introductions eat up so much second that I’ve start d myself losing interest. There are also fewer and fewer guests or topics I can even relate to as a cisgender father of two in a straight-presenting marriage. Lastly, on a superficial level, the hosts voice and inflections grate on me. So all in all, the show’s advocate episodes, despite having to sift for applicability, and the hosts book were both very supportive initially. But, the show is less applicable by the episode so I’m unsubscribing.

  • I enjoy the actual content of this podcast. I do not savor all of the personal plugging and podcast admin announcements that eat up almos

    By Zachary Zane

    When I finally embraced my bisexuality five long years after kissing my first man, I was elated, convinced that the world would now be my oyster. I thought being bisexual would double my chances of a date on any given Friday night. I couldn’t have been more wrong. 

    Women didn’t want to date me, fearing that I was using the bi label as a stepping stone to creature “full-blown” gay. Whether or not they’d openly accept it, many feared I’d inevitably leave them for a man. The queer men I dated didn’t hold this fallacious faith. Rather, they were unbelievably condescending. They’d say things like, “Oh, honey! I was bi too. You’ll get there.” When I reaffirmed my bisexuality, letting them know that this isn’t a pitstop, but a final destination, they’d respond, “I know you think that. I did too.” 

    So I stopped telling people I was pansexual, at least on the first date. It wasn’t that I was ashamed of being attracted to all genders or attempting to hide my bisexuality. I hoped that if they got to recognize and trust me, they would believe I was bisexual. I also figured i

    The Gay Bi Dads group aims to provide gay and multi-attracted men, who may be married, or who are still not out with a safe and confidential space to meet with other men in similar situations. Our group provides support and advice on coming out; managing family life as a queer or bisexual man as successfully as providing an opportunity for you to talk openly and safely about being either a gay or bisexual father. 

    We possess around 20 members but attendance at the monthly meetings is usually around 6 people so it’s not a large group.  New members can just position and listen and don’t include to share until they undergo comfortable.  We have a strict confidentiality policy and we predict all group members to adhere to this. We meet once a month. Meetings are either support group meetings where we meet in the centre and have a chat over pizza, workshop based meetings where we take part in various workshops or they may be occasional social meetings where we depart out for a light meal or coffee just to socialise.  

    Our group members have said: 

    &#; I love coming to the community, the support is very valuable to me&

    How Building a Space for Bi Men Helped Me Find My Own Voice

    Finding a voice for a silent majority is a surprisingly difficult thing to do. Bi’s may form up over half of the LGBTQ population—but when we search for signs of our own group we oftentimes come up with very little. There’s no singular ‘bi look’ (I refuse to receive it’s cuffed jeans and the colour purple) and bi friendly spaces can be few and far between. It can sometimes feel especially difficult if you are a bi man—a group that has been routinely erased and dismissed as gay.

    This lack of representation is what led TV writer and playwright Robert Cohen to ask himself “where are all the bi guys?” thus planting the seed that would blossom into the first episode of the Two Bi Guys podcast. Rob and his co-host/co-creator Alex Boyd contain built the show into an audio sanctuary for bi folk to experience seen, celebrated, and most importantly, heard.

    Two Bi Guys has a special resonance with me. Back in , I too was searching for a bi community after having recently come out and had stumbled upon a NYC bi discussion group aptly na