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Celebrate Bisexuality Day

Fly a bisexual flag, join a parade or event, help educate others, be yourself and most importantly be supportive of any bi people in your life.

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Amplify bisexual visibility and inclusion through educational content and community events that celebrate identity and combat invisibility within and beyond the LGBTQ+ space.

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  • Share bisexual history milestones (1987 March on Washington, 1999 founding) to educate followers on often-overlooked movement moments
  • Feature personal stories from bi community members about navigating dual invisibility and discrimination
  • Promote local teach-ins, poetry readings, and pride events as safe spaces for learning and celebration
  • Highlight the demographic shift: 25% of Gen Z identifies as bi—position your brand as an ally to younger, more fluid identities

History

Celebrate Bisexuality Day was established by Wendy Curry, Michael Page, and Gigi Raven Wilbur. It was first officially observed in 1999 by the International Lesbian and Gay Association Conference in Johannesburg, South Africa. The purpose was to raise awareness of the challenges faced by bisexuals all over the world who simply want to go on living their lives being treated fairly and equally.

“Ever since the Stonewall rebellion, the gay and lesbian community has grown in strength and visibility,” observed Wilbur, “The bisexual community also has grown in strength but in many ways are invisible.” It was this vision and the various experiences of marginalization and prejudice from both the straight and LGBTQ communities that inspired the founders to create this new holiday.

Since Freddy Mercury of the music sensation Queen was such an inspiration, the founders decided that his birthday would be the perfect day to establish Celebrate Bisexuality Day. This day ended up serving two purposes, the first being to establish a day that was dedicated to raising awareness of bisexuals everywhere, the second being to help reduce the prejudice faced by bisexuals and work to legitimize it as a sexual orientation. Since then it has been celebrated every year with teach-ins, poetry reading, parties, picnics, festivals, and a myriad of other awareness oriented activities.


How to celebrate

Find Local Events for Celebrate Bisexuality Day

One idea might be to check out your local area and find out if any teach-ins, poetry readings, or any other gatherings are being held that you might attend and learn a little more about it. While it may seem simple on the surface, but the complexities involved with living as a bisexual are perhaps more involved than many people would imagine. Be a Lifelong LearnerFor those who have friends or family members who are bi, perhaps you might consider respectfully asking them about their personal experiences facing adversity because of their sexuality or lifestyle.Another important way to learn is to educate oneself on the history of the Bisexual movement. For instance, consider these important facts:The first national bisexual contingent for the March on Washington was held in 1987 and was organized by Liz Nania.According to Invisible Majority, a report released by the Movement Advancement Project, bisexuals make up more than half of the LGBTQ community, and more than 2/3 of LGBTQ parents are bisexual.Bisexuals experience a great deal of invisibility, discrimination, societal rejection and violence that often leads to poor mental and physical health–including anxiety, mood disorders, and depression (according to the report mentioned above).Younger generations have more bisexuals. More than 25% of people ages 18-44 identify as neither gay, lesbian or heterosexual–compared to only 7-8% of older generations.

Educate Someone Else

Helping others gain the respect they deserve is a lifelong effort! Even those who are not bisexual can still spend time standing up for those who are marginalized. Whether adding a supportive comment to a personal conversation or publicly advocating during BiWeek, living a lifestyle that is opened minded and stands up for others is a noble purpose.

Fly a Bisexual Flag

Created in 1998 by Michael Page, the bi pride flag boasts the colors pink, blue and purple. Similar to the Pride flag with its rainbow colors, the Bi Pride flag only has the three colors. With bright magenta (hot pink) and royal blue stripes (consisting of 40% of the flag each) on the top and bottom (representing gay and/or straight attraction), the flag boasts a narrower purple stripe in the middle, which represents those who are bisexual. Celebrating this week might mean hanging the flag off of the front porch, attaching a smaller version to the top of the car, fashioning a scarf out of the colors, or simply wearing pink, blue and purple on the day–just to represent support. Celebrate Bisexuality Day is a chance to broaden the mind and learn a little bit about the struggles others in this world face. Show compassion to those who are different and learn something on this day and all throughout the year!