This one hit me hard! As a bi/pansexual woman, I've heard it all, from "you've just been traumatized by men, you'll get over it and admit you're really just straight" to "you're just a lesbian who's a coward". I've had partners tell me they were afraid that I was going to cheat on them with someone of a different sex, and people (including my own mom) who have told me to my face that bisexuality isn't real. I've been left out of friend groups for being not heteronormative enough, or for being not gay enough. And I've been ostracized from queer spaces, even ones I set up (like my high school's Gay-Straight Alliance, which I founded before coming out as bisexual). I've played the "pronoun game" by hiding the gender of the person I was dating, sometimes even when the person I was dating was a man, because I wasn't ready for whoever I was talking to to know I'm bi. And I've had to remind even good friends that just because I was most recently with someone of one gender, it doesn't mean (now that I'm single) I won't date someone of a different gender. It's exhausting. Thank you for telling this story this way, it was powerful and such an important message! Honestly, I now mostly date other bi/pansexuals, because it's just so much easier to not have to constantly justify or defend my sexuality. And being bisexual is its own thing, we have our own stereotypes and culture, and it's freeing to date someone else who can share that and who has similar experiences.
Lovely short film raised many issues esp what group do bisexuality fall into neither one or the other I felt sorry for the guys ex who couldn't understand you guys produce thought provoking short films
They could have also shown the story in such a way that the bisex boy tells his girlfriend about himself and his girlfriend leaves him, that the bisex boy has true love with someone else.