Jane Velez-Mitchell talks to Dr. Phil about coming out and bisexuality
Bisexuals of the world, rejoice! Yesterday's episode of Dr. Phil, in which he spoke with out lesbian CNN news anchor The headline guest was Velez-Mitchell, and though I didn't make this clear in the TV Alert yesterday, she identifies as a lesbian, not as a bisexual. She was on the show to promote her new book, iWant: My Journey from Addiction and Overconsumption to a Simpler, Honest Life, and joining her was her former girlfriend and her former long-time boyfriend.
Velez-Mitchell succinctly told Dr. Phil, "I got honest about my alcoholism, and then I got honest about my sexual orientation." What was most interesting to me about Valez-Mitchell's interview was that Dr. Phil asked her, quite respectfully, "There are so many people who are still hiding their sexual orientation. You're intelligent, you're educated, you're investigative, yet it took you a long time to [realize you are a lesbian]. You don't live in the backwoods, you don't believe the myths about the gay and lesbian lifestyle being a choice. Yet, it took you so long. Why?" Velez-Mitchell's answer: "Denial is a powerful thing. The drumbeat of heterosexuality is strong, and before you know it, you're swept up in its tide. Coming out is not an event, it's a process." Everyone travels a different path in coming to terms with her sexuality. It's always comforting to hear someone like Velez-Mitchell speak candidly about her difficulties and triumphs. The second guest on the show was Barbara, a 39-year-old lesbian that began to question her sexual orientation after she'd undergone IVF to have a baby.
She told Dr. Phil, "I’ve never questioned this part of my identity before in my life, and I’ve gone through a lot of different issues and questioned a lot of other things, so for this to be something I’m questioning is a little troubling." The first thing Dr. Phil asked her was if she really is sexually attracted to men, or if she feels a societal pressure to get a husband and a white picket fence, so that her daughter can have a fulfilling life. She agreed that that was part of it, and Dr. Phil advised her to relax, and realize that, five months out of pregnancy, her hormones are still wacky, and maybe it's probably not the best time to start questioning something you've known since you were 13. However, he also said that if she was feeling an attraction to men, she didn't have to close herself off to it. He introduced Denise Pin, from the American Institute on Bisexuality, and she gave a kind of insight we never get to see on TV:
Barbara was so obviously relieved by what Denise was saying that it made me wonder who puts more pressure on bisexuals: heterosexuals or the LGBT community? Both Dr. Phil and Denise agreed that Barbara should try to spend this time getting to know and enjoy her baby. Dr. Phil cautioned her not to buy into the myth that a child needs a mother and a father to grow up properly. "A baby can have a normal, natural, fulfilling life with a single mother or with two mothers," he told her.
The final guest was Meeka, mother who was "disgusted" when she found out her daughter was bisexual, and considered it a "fad, like a pair of shoes." Both Dr. Phil and Denise listened with compassion as Meeka described taking her daughter to a counselor and then leaving ten minutes later when the counselor agreed that she is bisexual. They applauded her for caring enough about her daughter to call into the show, but then they got real on her: Dr. Phil noted that gay teens are four times more likely to commit suicide than their peers. And gay teens who are rejected and isolated by their families are nine times more likely to commit suicide. "Rather than focusing on what you want the truth to be," Dr. Phil told her, "focus on what the truth is, and then educate yourself so you can have an intelligent conversation with your daughter, because at no time do you want to give her the impression that she's not OK with you. " You can watch clips of the show at DrPhil.com. If you can find the entire episode online, I'd recommend watching it. I'm usually not a fan of TV psychology, but I was pleasantly surprised with Dr. Phil's knowledge and his fair assessment about bisexuality and the process of coming out. Did anyone else catch Dr. Phil yesterday? Submitted by on October 9, 2009 - 11:00am. |
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Wow...
Thanks for the synopsis :)
Thanks for the synopsis, StuntDouble!
As I posted in response to your TV ALERT YESTERDAY I did watch Dr Phil. I still can't find any full-length vids online, but I agree -- I highly recommend it be watched.
I'll admit, the whole time I was watching I was waiting for the other shoe to drop but, surprisingly, it didn't. While he wasn't saying "I support lesbians/gays/etc", he did treat all his guests with respect and handled each sub-topic with dignity. And having the rep from the American Institute of Bisexuality as well as being in touch with GLAAD -- I dare say I was impressed.
The only thing that made me cringe AND laugh out loud simultaneously was the ominous sounding background music that played during the video of Velez-Mitchell's ex-bf's account of their relationship. But that's totally per usual for his show and others similar to it. So cheesy, lol!
Again, pleasantly surprised but hey -- and I'll quote Dr Phil from yesterday re: attitudes toward lesbian/gay people -- "progress is being made". Yup, in the some of the last places I'd ever expect. :)
Pleasantly Shocked!
I truly expected Dr. Phil to come out on the other side of this issue, but he was so surprisingly sensitive, educated, and respectful. Go Dr. Phil!
I, too, am surprised...
This sounds like an amazingly thoughtful, dignified, insightful piece for a show that seems to rely on theatrics and Dr. Phil's drawl more often than not. I particularly love his response to the digusted mother (I paraphrase): "focus on what the truth is, not what you want it to be". That is such a powerful statement, and who knows? If that mother takes it into consideration, consider the possibilities for her daughter and her relationship with her daughter.
Also loved Denise Pin's quote, "just relax", everyone seems so set on having hard and fast labels and there is a lot of pressure on bisexuals from both communities, with each one tending to dismiss bisexuals as flighty, slutty or insincere. Bisexuals are rarely taken seriously, and the mother's comment about bisexuality being a fad is the most voiced opinion out there, for both heterosexuals and homosexuals.
Thanks for this article, I never watch Dr. Phil, so I would have no idea that this was being aired. I love that this is a show watched by average Americans, many of whom may not know much beyond media stereotype and age-old rumor concerning bisexuals. Kudos!
WOW!!!
I think the pressure is equal from both the LGBT AND the Straight communities...I'm bi, but I have found to my ....disappointment, that I find easier acceptance when I say I identify as gay or straight, But get the scrunchy face when I say Bi...the invariable response I get from men is one of two answers, 1) can we do a threesome or 2) can I watch....men seem to think I'm being sexually adventurous...that is soo NOT the case! I get the same response from the lesbians that I can't make up my mind...so I don't even mention the bisexuality.
I agree from your synopsis of the Dr Phil show, that there is distinct need for better understanding...that progress is much needed. I was unable to watch the show due to being at work, and will be eagerly looking for full versions of the ep online. Thank you for posting your synopsis and will be bookmarking this column.
wow
I'll echo that "wow"
i watched it
Hang in there
I am very sorry to hear this. Unfortunately this still happens, even when research has shown that sexuality is more likely genetic (i.e. you were born with your preference (gay, bi or straight) and it was passed on BY your parents). Your mother doesn't understand that it is not wrong. I don't know how I could help you (since I'm not from a religious family, they just didn't understand), but I just want to tell you that it really is not wrong. Someone told me this when I was in the closet and it really helped me. So I hope it does the same for you. You are not wrong.
Two quotes I love on this matter:
"Families are built on trust, love, respect and security. Not on one man and one woman."
"I am a Christian. That is my faith. I am a lesbian. That is my sexual orientation. I make no apology for being either." - http://www.sisterfriends-together.org/
You should check out the above website, it used to be called christianlesbians.org.
Good luck with everything.
I feel ya
Leviticus
The Leviticus argument drives me crazy! I hate it when people pick and choose parts of the Bible to reference in order to suit themselves. I always ask the person who uses the Leviticus argument if they eat shrimp or have ever left the house on Sunday and they look at me crazy. I then tell them they are also in violation of Leviticus. This letter to Dr. Laura always makes me laugh...
http://www.gaychurch.org/gay_and_christian_yes/calling_the_rainbow_nation_home/7b_gac_clobber%20passages_the_levitical_law.htm
I also remind them that John 3:16 stated that God loved the world and that's means everyone not just people who claim to be Christians yet judge others even though the Bible tells us not to in Matthew 7:1-5. They weren't the only ones who paid attention in Sunday school!
lol
A Letter to Louise
I don't know if it has ever been mentioned on this site, but I recently came across a wonderful, affirming essay, written by a pastor, Bruce W. Lowe, entitled "A Letter to Louise--A Biblical Affirmation of Homosexuality." It is posted at many Christian gay sites, and here is one link to it: http://www.godmademegay.com
Mr. Lowe's inspiration for initially delving into the topic is quite touching. The end product of his efforts to help his friend, and educate himself, is this long letter to his friend, Louise, which has taken on a life of it's own. I highly recommend it to anyone, gay or straight, Christian or not.
...To me this pastor's efforts illustrate what being a Christian is truly about.
Hang in there, Rainbow.
Powerful and inspiring
I don't know if your mother
I don't know if your mother would be swayed by the fact that many Quaker Yearly Meetings in Britain and the US have for years recognised that relationships between people of the same sex are as valid in the eyes of God as any other; and that Britain Yearly Meeting (ie all British Quaker Meetings as a whole) have decided it's time to push for absolute marriage equality, and are recording Civil Partnerships as Marriages.
Letting her know that there are LGBT-supportive Christians denominations around might help.
She sounds really scared. Maybe she needs to talk about her fear rather than the certainty she uses to mask it.
I really feel for you.
a nice surprisee
wow for the fourth time!
I saw Dr Phil's show once,
I saw Dr Phil's show once, well over 10 years ago, and switched it off because he came over so very, very badly. So I'm really happy with this. Progress is being made, indeed, and thank goodness.
Barbara was so obviously relieved by what Denise was saying that it made me wonder who puts more pressure on bisexuals: heterosexuals or the LGBT community?
My experience has been that bi people are now more accepted than we were 10 years ago, but that those gay men and lesbians who are hostile to bi people are way more dismissive, verbally abusive, and plain aggressive about the issue than most straight people who don't like us (usually, it's just that women think we're going to steal their boyfriends and men think we're sexually available to them, which is gross and offensive, but not as immediately threatening - as women, I think we're all used to our sexualities being supposed to be subordinate to male desire).
An important caveat, though, is that, I have never lived in an area where people are predominantly influenced by the religious right, and have worked primarily in progressive organisations where diversity is considered A Good Thing We Are Aiming For, and that gay men seem to have more of a problem with bi guys than lesbians have with bi women. It's all based on personal experience and not a scientific survey.
What I have found is that dismissive, hostile comments and behaviours by lesbians and gay men hurt far more than the same comments by straight people; having come out in a circle of friends of all orientations and gender identities, I was fully accepted for who I am, and so was shocked when my introduction to my then local LGBT scene was being physically attacked by a lesbian who screamed abuse at me as she shoved me up against a wall and had to be prised off me (she was, ironically, listened to and comforted as she cried about the discrimination she had encountered as a butch lesbian by another openly bisexual friend, who went on to find her an LGBT-friendly counsellor and put her in touch with more support). We expect the queer community to be a shiny, wonderful, fully-inclusive community when we come out, and not a motley collection of ordinary human beings with the full range of human emotions, dysfunctions, and healthy, supportive behaviours.
Yes!
That question that was posed was precisely what caught my eye. I think that it is a very valid question. I too have been dismissed because I'm bi. I am always shocked at the type of responses I get when the "revelation" is made. While I have never received out and out hostility as you have received, I nevertheless am subjected to snide comments and the questioning of whether or not I "REALLY" am attracted to women. Nevermind that I've been in a deeply committed relationship with a woman for over a year now. I realize that I'm perceived to be a flip-floper, incapable of making and sticking with a decision, and therefore not worthy of true trust---because after all--I may decide to "switch".
Its enough to make you want to throw your hands in the air in frustration and walk away at times
Really want to second this
Thank you for your comments here. I'm another bisexual woman who has gotten intense hostility from the LGBT community, and I'm glad to hear you talking about your experiences. (Ironically, I've heard many times, from both men & women, that gay men are more accepting of bi men than lesbians of bi women. I suspect it's really hard to quantify.) I strongly agree that hostility from LGT people hurts more than that from straights.
It's really awful that you were assaulted by a lesbian motivated by biphobia. That's beyond horrible. It's also a hate crime. It reminds me of a similar case I know of personally, in which a lesbian raped a bi woman and told her she deserved it because she was bi.
We as a community really need to stand against this type of violence whenever and wherever it happens.
I also just wanted to say I think it's awful that your friend put so much effort into taking care of the perpetrator; I have been in or seen similar situations unfold--and when bystanders put so much more effort into taking care of the abuser, the person who has more power in some way, it really hurts. It often validates them and ignores the real harm they have just done.
I really hope you got the support and care you deserve. Nobody deserves to be shoved up against a wall simply for who they are; no one deserve to be made the target of someone else's problem. And we all deserve a healthy and abuse-free community.
As it turned out, it was for
As it turned out, it was for the best - it was like a lancing of a boil. This was someone who'd been abused all her life for standing out as obviously butch, and she'd had a terrible and traumatic series of events occur just before this happened. It all erupted. She became hysterical, she was talked down, she was completely mortified afterwards, and she began really working hard on dealing with her problems in a constructive way instead of lashing out at other people. And it taught me an object lesson: Self-loathing breeds hatred of others, and if you want to get past the hate, you have to cut the crap and deal with the self-loathing.
I'm not excusing the behaviour, just explaining that, once I was able to think about it, it taught me a lot about how abusive behaviour is often the end result of fear and self-hatred. That in turn led me to a deeper interest in how people tick, non-violent communications, restorative justice, etc., and towards training as a therapist (once I'm qualified, I hope to train specifically in working with queer and trans people). The person who comforted her then took me home and gave me a good listening to, and kept checking in with me for a long while. She was a rock and we had some fantastic discussions. I worked out that those of us who are responded to with fear and aggression are actually powerful - people wouldn't fear us if we weren't.
In this case, the right thing was done. I was lucky. I wouldn't recommend it as a route to personal growth, and I would never excuse violence. I am convinced that the fear and aggression within the LGBTQI communities is a reflection of the wider social disease of fear, power, and heirarchy, and that a great deal of work needs to be done.
Who puts more pressure on bisexuals
I think this question brings up interesting points. We all know that straight people and countless parents look at bsexuality as a phase and hope that some day they will realize it and become fully striaight. Or that bixsexuals are slutty and unfaithful. But the same thing happens on the gay side too. The LGBT community (the l-g-B-t community) really does pressure bisexuals in the same way straight people often do. They think that their bisexuality is a phase that will lead them to the path of full lesbianism or homosexuality.
We also often exclude bisexuals when reffering to lady-loving lady's. And it's sad. Bisexuals are still seen as "other" even in the gay community. Most of my friends don't see it this way, but I do see it from some people. Even subtle things that people don't even pick up on. Like calling women lesbians who have just started to date women after dating men. Or calling a woman who went from being in relationship with a man to being in one with a women and then back to dating a man again straight. We kind of eliminate the idea that these women might just be bisexual.
I also feel like some people from the gay community feel like bisexuals are "less gay" in some way and I don't feel like that's the case at all. I think a bisexual woman can be just as gay as a lesbian woman. Although this notion of more or less gay is kinda silly if you think about it... It's fine to joke about, but it can be damaging when taken seriously. It can make people feel less accepted and disconnected from the community.
Beautifully put
Thank you for saying this.
I really agree, especially with your point about the damage that these attitudes do. There's a connection between the mild prejudice you describe and the more extreme and violent forms of biphobia KJ & I describe above--and even if there wasn't, any kind of fracture like this really hurts people and our community as a whole.
Minority of the Minority
Your second sentence needs proof reading.
"Rather than focusing on
"Rather than focusing on what you want the truth to be," Dr. Phil told her, "focus on what the truth is, and then educate yourself so you can have an intelligent conversation with your daughter, because at no time do you want to give her the impression that she's not OK with you. "
Love this quote. So many people are all caught up in what they WANT to be reality, they end up burying themselves in a massive hole called Denial, and they miss out on the lives of loved ones.
"Rather than focusing on
"Rather than focusing on what you want the truth to be," Dr. Phil told her, "focus on what the truth is, and then educate yourself so you can have an intelligent conversation with your daughter, because at no time do you want to give her the impression that she's not OK with you. "
Love this quote. So many people are all caught up in what they WANT to be reality, they end up burying themselves in a massive hole called Denial, and they miss out on the lives of loved ones.
kudos to Dr. Phil
Wow - I really was shocked that this seems to have come off so well! Count me in as another person who's experienced disbelief, anger, discrimination, dismissal, etc. from the queer community in amounts higher (or perhaps just more potent) than from the hetero community. KayJ said most of what I could - it's definitely better than it was 10 years ago, but there's still a lot of vitriol out there for us.
This comes up often now, since I've been with a guy in an essentially monogamous relationship for the past 7 years. There are legitimate points of discussion to be made around the fact that I end up passing for straight much of the time, despite my firm desire to not do so. But people see us together and hetero assumptions follow; conversations can easily correct that, but unless I bring up sexual orientation with the folks at the airline, the car rental co., the cab driver, hotel clerk and anyone who sees us hold hands on the street, one vacation can see me labeled as 'straight' hundreds of times. That *does* mean that I experience life differently than I did when I was with a woman, and I do get some benefits of straight privilege from it. And I'm sure some people find my orientation less threatening because I'm with a man - they don't have to think about scary lesbian sex when I come out to them. But it doesn't make me any less queer.
Anyway, Traci's point about how we rarely 'give' people the label bisexual hit home for me - I feel like I'm generally 'allowed' to call myself bi (after 15 years, few people will claim it's phase, at least to my face). However, it's an identity that I have to fight for and actively claim; otherwise people will assign me to lesbian or straight depending on whom I'm with. The lack of recognition, esp. when combined with the overt hostility, gets wearying after a while.
2 amazing things about this show
From your description, it sounds like this show did 2 things I'm really glad to hear about:
1) It testified that even if people in liberal and cosmopolitan surroundings can really struggle painfully with coming out, because heterosexism is really that strong. (A lot of the liberal straight people I know want to pretend it's only the far religious right who are biased, but I have not found that to be true.)
2) It made the point that many, many people come out as lesbian and gay first and then come out a second time as bisexual. I've been active in the bi community for years, and it infuriates me that people treat being bi like a phase when gayness and straightness are phases as or even more often!