Bisexual Visibility Day

Bisexual Visibility Day - Svakom Australia

How did Bisexuality Awareness Day originate?

In the early 1990s, various bisexual organizations began to form, especially in the United States. However, the international day was established in 1999 at the annual conference of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA), thanks to the initiative of three bisex activists: Wendy Curry, Michael Page and Gigi Raven Wilbur.

The date was chosen because on September 23, Freddie Mercury was born, a singer whom activists admired and who seemed to them to make bisexuality visible with great force. Also, that day was Gigi Raven Wilbur's birthday.

However, Wilbur stated that there is still a long way to go before the bisexual community is recognized.

“Since the Stonewall rebellion, the gay and lesbian community has grown in strength and visibility. The bisexual community has also grown in strength, but in many ways we remain invisible. I have also been conditioned by society to automatically label a couple who walk hand in hand as heterosexual or gay, depending on the gender I perceive in each person,” he explained to ILGA.

 

Myths about the bisexual community

It's just a phase or stage

It is true that some gay or lesbian people may go through a period of transition to their sexual orientation, but this is not the rule: it does not happen in all cases. Bisexuality should not be overridden and not confused with the sexual curiosity that anyone may have at some point in her life.

 

Bisexual people are lesbians or gays with a fear of accepting their homosexuality

Within the LGBTIQ community, many bisexual people experience situations of discrimination, as they are thought to be confused or do not want to reveal their sexual orientation. However, they may have attraction towards their gender and others, and it will not always be in the same percentage for each one, since in some cases the attraction fluctuates over time.

 

The bisexual person ceases to be bisexual if they have a relationship with a person of the opposite gender

This biphobic stereotype is rooted in the idea that bisexuality is a stage of experimentation before returning to heterosexuality. However, it is possible to maintain a relationship with the opposite gender and each maintain a different sexual orientation.

There are times when people decide to keep quiet about their bisexuality when they are in a heterosexual relationship for fear of discrimination or rejection that they may face if their partners or family know their sexual orientation.

 

Why does bisexuality deserve to be respected?

Bisexuality is a sexual orientation just as valid as the others. It is not a stage or it represents confusion and each one lives it in a unique way. It is important that these stereotypes are demolished so that their rights are recognized and more people are encouraged to express themselves without fear.


View More Blogs

Closer, Even Apart

Closer, Even Apart: How App-Connected Play Rewrites Intimacy

Jun 07, 2026
by
Svakom AU

Distance doesn't have to mean disconnection. A sophisticated look at how app-connected intimacy keeps couples close - across a room or across the world.

Your Body Was Never the Problem

Your Body Was Never the Problem: A Warm Manifesto for Self-Care

Jun 04, 2026
by
Svakom AU

Self-care isn't a fix for a flawed body - it's a relationship with a worthy one. A warm, body-positive manifesto for treating yourself with the regard you deserve.

The new wellness wardrobe — Svakom AU blog banner

The New Wellness Wardrobe: Why a Wearable Vibrator Is the Lifestyle Upgrade You Didn't See Coming

Jun 01, 2026
by
Svakom AU

Discover why a wearable vibrator like ERICA is the modern wellness essential. Premium, discreet, and quietly yours — shop Svakom AU.

Your first wearable — a beginner's guide blog banner

Your First Wearable: A Calm, Modern Guide to Choosing a Beginner-Friendly Vibrator

May 31, 2026
by
Svakom AU

New to vibrators? This calm beginner's guide explains what to look for, what to expect, and why ERICA is a gentle place to start.

Coming home to your body — self-care blog banner

Coming Home to Your Body: Self-Care, Pleasure, and the Permission You Didn't Know You Needed

May 29, 2026
by
Svakom AU

Self-care isn't a face mask. It's coming home to your body. Why pleasure belongs in your routine — and how ERICA fits in.

The soft-luxury EOFY edit

EOFY Self-Care: The Soft-Luxury Edit

May 26, 2026
by
Svakom AU

End of financial year is a quiet moment for soft, considered self-care. A curated edit of intimate wellness pieces worth investing in this June.

Choosing gently — a calm wellness guide

The Gentle Way to Choose Your First G-Spot Vibrator

May 26, 2026
by
Svakom AU

Choosing your first g-spot vibrator should feel like an invitation, not an interrogation. A calm, considered guide to finding the right one for you.

Permission to feel everything — meet AMY 2

Permission to Feel Everything: A Closer Look at Amy 2

May 26, 2026
by
Svakom AU

Slow down with us and explore Amy 2 — the elegant g-spot vibrator built for sensation, softness, and the kind of pleasure that takes its time.

Meet AVERY — the classic, quietly reinvented

Meet AVERY: The Thrusting Rabbit Vibrator That Reinvents the Classic

May 25, 2026
by
Svakom AU

AVERY is the modern thrusting rabbit vibrator — dual-action, app-controlled, whisper-quiet. A full deep-dive on the premium rabbit redefining the category.