It’s Bisexual Awareness Week. To mark the occasion, Broadway actor Andy Mientus has written a lengthy but powerful Instagram post about the stigma many people still attach to bisexuality.
The 29-year-old Spring Awakening and Les Misérables star says he is often contacted by young people still coming to terms with their sexualities, and “it breaks my heart to learn that they are denying their hearts, bodies, and souls just because of what other people will think of them.”
“I try to be visible all the time just by being true to who I am,” Mientus says, “but I know many people struggle with this because of the stigma associated with bi-ness.”
“Have you ever doubted someone who tells you they are Bi–‘Sure, Jan’–or debated the validity of that claim behind their back?” he asks. “Do you have a preconceived idea of what bi ‘really’ looks like based on what TV and movies have told you? Do you think of it just as a sexual kink or as a true identity?”
Mientus continues: “When I encounter ignorance about my identity, I always try to approach it from a place of warmth and education, so this is not me lecturing the monosexuals out there. I’m inviting you this week to think about your own feelings towards bisexuals and ask yourself if there is any lingering doubt or prejudice there.”
Check out the full post below…
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This article originally appeared on Queerty
Photo credit courtesy of Instagram.

many people is ashamed about their sexuality because of police discrimination which is not suppose to so it is good to be who you are and be proud of it. http://www.unn.edu.ng/
I have not doubted it and quite honestly have never heard anyone doubt it either. I get that I may be somehow under-exposed to these issue, but honestly, I don’t see it.
“Have you ever doubted someone who tells you they are Bi–‘Sure, Jan’–or debated the validity of that claim behind their back?” he asks. ”
No, and don’t care. To each their own. They are, and never have been a threat to me, and that is how everyone needs to start thinking.
One critique though. I’m not a “mono-sexual”. I’m a heterosexual male. We get to make our own labels, not have others do so for us. Right? Right.