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Bi College Girls
Here’s Why Bisexuality in Girls Is Totally on the Rise
The young person’s guide to conquering (and saving) the world. Teen Vogue covers the latest in celebrity news, politics, fashion, beauty, wellness, lifestyle, and entertainment.
A new report released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) may be indicating a paradigm shift in the sexual openness among young adults. According to data collected between 2011 and 2013 from the U.S National Survey of Family Growth, an increasing amount of young men and women are identifying as bisexual.
Debby Herbenick, associate professor at Indiana University and author of the book Sex Made Easy told CNN , “As awareness about bisexuality has grown over the years, it could be easier for people to label themselves as bisexual.”
Researchers interviewed over 9,000 people between the ages of 18 and 44 about their sexual experiences, attractions, and orientation. While some of the findings were similar to previous reports on the topic of sexuality, as reported by CNN, this one found a noticeable increase in the number of young people open to same-sex experiences, particularly among women ages 18-24. Five and a half percent of women and 2% of men openly identified as bisexual, which is a jump compared to the 3.9% and 1.2%, respectively, reported in the last family growth survey. And women are three times more likely to have same-sex contact throughout their lifetime than their male counterparts.
“There is still an acceptance, at least in a superficial way, rather than a stigma when it comes to female bisexuality,” Dr. Logan Levkoff, a sexologist and relationship therapist, tells Teen Vogue . “Women have freedom to express themselves affectionately and even sexually with each other in a way that men often do not.”
But despite those norms, the study still shows that men are now more likely to say they're “mostly” attracted to the opposite sex, rather than “only attracted” as reported in the previous surveys.
“One of the most important things to remember is that sexual orientation is not a constant," Casey E. Copen, a demographer at the CDC National Center of Health Statistics and lead author of the study, tells Teen Vogue . “The study reveals that a person’s sexual orientation is not always consistent with their sexual behavior."
While there is no data to directly confirm this, it is coincidental that an increase of sexually open young adults comes right as a new wave of millennial celebrities proudly assert their queer identities .
“There is no doubt that young adults are more accepting of sexuality and all of its forms in general,” says Dr. Levkoff. “The uptick in celebrities who are public about their sexual lives and identities certainly helps young people who are navigating their own non-heterosexual or non-cisgender lives."
Check out Teen Vogue ’s February issue cover star, Amandla Stenberg.
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I Discovered I Was Bisexual At Girl Scout Camp
By heatherbarmore — Written on Apr 03, 2020
The first time I kissed a girl was at Girl Scout camp when I was 14 years old. Girl Scout camp, of all places! She was a short, red-haired girl named Bailey who I pecked on the lips in a moment of teenage experimentation.
I kissed her again in the parking lot in front of my rather prudish mother who stood by, ready to load me up into our minivan. In my periphery I could see her eyes widen and her face scrunch in disgust. “Let’s go,” she said curtly.
After kissing Bailey, I returned home and started my sophomore year of high school. I didn’t head through the doors of my small town school and proudly proclaim that I was contemplating my sexuality and possibly being a lesbian. A kiss was just a kiss, and a peck was my version of "we’ll see."
Although my parents were sexual beings by my estimations — I once found more condoms than any man could possibly need in a dish on my father’s dresser — they never spoke of the big "it" out loud. Since the Internet came of age, just as I did, instead of having "the talk" with my parents, I learned about sex via the World Wide Web. Thanks to Ask Jeeves (remember Ask Jeeves?), I learned about orgasms and the purpose of a clitoris.
From September to June, I admired (and attempted to approach) the boys in my grade and was quickly rebuffed. It seemed I wasn’t good enough, pretty enough, popular enough for them. I simply wasn’t enough at all.
Come July, I officially switched to the other team, so to speak. Nothing serious, mind you, just casual flirtation and a willingness to be open and affectionate with women. 
But it was Girl Scout camp where my curiosity about women, bisexuality, and sexual orientation first piqued. It wasn’t simply the place I learned to tie a rope, build a fire, kayak and sail; it was where I learned to appreciate women as leaders.
I envied these women because they were able to be themselves and — as it seemed from my teenage vantage point — had been able to forge a path of acceptance in themselves and those around them. The women I met were creative, talented, and kind. They often wore their heart on their sleeves.
These weren't the girls I was forced to be around in my high school for nine months of the year — these were women. Real women. They weren’t mean or haughty, but adventurous and clever. These were the type of women I hoped to become.
Eventually, during my junior year of high school, I moved past personality traits and truly began to notice the female form of my fellow staffers, the way a woman’s body moved with hips and curves. At the time, I was a breast girl. An enthusiast, if you will, so I admired (clandestinely) the chests of those around me to compare and contrast to what I had to offer. 
I developed a lesbian crush on my friend Lindsay, but she was dating a fellow counselor. On one of our breaks, I brought Lindsay home with me before heading back to camp. My father was courteous, but later referred to her as "that dyke." It was then I realized that crushing on a woman and holding hands in the woods was as far as it could ever go.
Eleven years later, I stood in the bathroom of my apartment. My girlfriend at the time, Heidi, was taking a bath. I knew she had been dying for one, so I surprised her with a Lush bath bomb. I swirled the water around with my hand and asked how she liked it before receiving a kiss. Not a peck, not experimentation, but a full-on plant where she grabbed my face with her wet hands.
I got up from the edge of the tub and started to undress myself and prepare for bed. We had sex the night before — some of the best sex I've ever had — and she fell asleep wrapped around me so that I could feel her chest on my back.
Three years later, long after Heidi and I broke up, I was sitting on a friend’s rooftop with a group of girlfriends. While I hadn't inherited my parents’ reluctance to discuss sex, I'd been known to keep many intimate details to myself, namely the one where I openly say that I'd had sex with women and I'd probably do it again.
After a bottle of wine or two, it came up. Amid close friends, I nonchalantly mentioned an ex who happened to also have a vagina.
One friend simply said, “Oh, so you’re bisexual? How did I not know this?” and the conversation moved on. Another friend poked me in the arm, gave me a side-eye and said, “I told you no one cares.”
I'm bisexual. I'm attracted to people , full stop. For far too long, that was something I was reluctant to admit. Once upon a time, my parents sent me off to Girl Scout camp where I was imparted with a healthy dose of independence, and, more importantly, an ability to finally find women with whom I could form a bond. 
Perhaps it was finding that capacity within myself, in this world full of gray areas, that made it possible for me to eventually be able to connect to women based on friendship and acceptance. Over the years, I've found a natural lust for both women and men, and eventually a confidence to go after both sexes.
In a recent conversation with my once-prudish mother, I mentioned what camp did for me: how it turned me into a woman who loves people — all people — and I told her that she raised a woman who wanted to love (and be loved) by whomever.
I broached the topic carefully, waiting for disappointment. She smiled and said, “Good.” Nothing more, nothing less. Simple acceptance, which is really all I ever wanted.
Heather Barmore is a blogger, freelance writer and policy advocate. Visit her website or follow her on Twitter .
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It’s springtime, which means it’s time for allergies, warmer weather, and spring break for colleges around the continental U.S. And spring break, my friends, means hot college chicks wearing skimpy bikinis and getting turnt at the beach. Hell yeah.
In case you’re someone who just wishes they could be 20 again and party with some crazy college girls, you’re in luck. For our viewing pleasure, the lovely people at College Weekly and JusCollege sent two videographers to Lake Havasu, Arizona, for an entire month to document all the wild shit spring breakers do during spring break.
Do yourself a favor and watch the video. It’s just an entire video dedicated to college girls jumping up and down in bikinis. Very wholesome stuff.
To save you some time, I’ll let you in on a little secret: the good stuff starts at 1:50, around the same time as the techno remix version of Third Eye Blind ‘s “Semi-Charmed Kind of Life” Yup. 
In case you want to see more and vicariously relive spring break through YouTube videos, here are some more equally overproduced clips that are sure to terrify the parents of college girls everywhere. Girls Gone Wild, amiright? 
And since we’re already on the topic of college, here are some of the best, most overproduced sorority recruitment video s of all time:

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"Whenever I played with Barbies, I would always have same-sex Barbie couples."
You might remember one specific moment where the truth about your sexuality suddenly hit you — or, as one girl below put it, her "Oh, sh*t, I'm gay" moment. Below, 30 people recall the moments they knew they weren't straight.
"When I was in middle school, I realized that the reason that I loved Taylor Swift wasn't that I wanted to be Taylor Swift, but because I had a crush on her. I also started having what I eventually realized was a crush on a girl at school. Being bisexual can be an odd experience, because it can be very easy to brush aside your own identity for a long time before realizing that you're capable of being in love with more than one gender."— Mimi, 17
"I had always felt a bit different, especially when I went out with guys. It just didn't feel right. I knew my sophomore year of college when I went to a Friendsgiving and saw a female friend of mine dancing. The feeling I felt in my gut...well I just knew. I identify as gay now." — Haley, 22
"There were a lot of signs in my childhood that I ignored, but the first time I was self-aware of my sexual identity was when I watched a video from the musical Fun Home . It was a clip from the song 'Changing my Major' (a song about a girl who realizes that she is a lesbian). Emily Skeggs (the girl) came out in briefs and knee socks and I thought, 'Wow I'm definitely not straight,'and it spiraled from there." — Kelli, 17
"When I was in seventh grade, I had a crush on a girl. I was unable to talk to her normally and was so shy around her and I didn't know why. It wasn't until years later that I realized I liked her romantically. I still wasn't sure about my sexuality, though, until my freshman year of high school when I met a girl at a concert and we immediately clicked. Hours into the festival, after spending all day together, we started holding hands, putting our arms around each other, leaning on each other's shoulders. I wanted to kiss her, and I had no doubt in my mind that I liked girls. I'm bisexual, but honestly, I lean more toward girls." — Meg, 16
"I was 18 and a sophomore in college. There was a girl in my English class who I couldn't stop thinking about. I thought, 'Maybe I just really want to be her friend?' But it was more than that. I knew that I was starting to get feelings for her. I was scared because I had never felt this way about another girl, and I didn't know if it was okay to feel that way. I cried my eyes out alone in my dorm, just worried what people would think of me if it had ever come out that I liked a girl."— Amber, 21
"Even when I was little, I always found I had an attraction toward both males and females. I realized that I had a crush on one of my best girl friends when I was young, and whenever I played with Barbies, I would always have same-sex Barbie couples." — Hannah, 18
"The moment I realized I was attracted to girls was back in eighth grade when I developed a crush on one of my best friends. It was the first 'real' crush I had ever really had. Since I knew that she liked girls, too, I think that helped me realize that it was a possibility for us to be together. We were pretty much attached at the hip already so that deepened my affection for her. I started thinking that maybe I was just attracted to HER, not girls. But then I realized that there were other signs in my childhood that pointed towards the fact that I've probably always liked girls, such as a memory from second grade when I found this one particular friend very beautiful and I remember always wanting to hug her or just be around her. That's the clearest earliest moment that I can think of, but falling for my friend in eighth grade was what made me realize this whole other side to me." — Josefina, 18
"My 'Oh, sh*t, I'm gay' moment happened when I was 16 and watching an Indiana Jones movie marathon. The third film had always been my favorite, and I never consciously understood why. Turns out I had a huge crush on the female lead, not Harrison Ford." — Katharine, 21
"One of the earliest things I remember is looking at my best girl friend in middle school and knowing that I felt very strongly for her, almost too strongly for just a friendship. I always wanted to be with her any chance I could get. After a few years of putting all of myself into a friendship, I realized that maybe I cared for her in a way she couldn't care for me back. I repressed it for so long and said to myself, 'I still like guys so I can't like girls,' so often that I would just try to keep every thought or feeling for another girl out of my head. The feelings started to get too much to control when I was around 18. That was when I finally started to try to accept it for myself. It took until I was a month shy of 20 to come out to my first friend." — Kate, 21
"I always knew as a child that I was queer, but lacked the understanding and vocabulary to properly categorize myself. I remember in kindergarten saying I wanted to marry a girl, which shocked my parents." — Livia, 20
"I remember watching Daniela Bianchi in From Russia with Love (the James Bond movie) with my dad when I was no older than six. She was curved like a Barbie doll. That was probably one of the first times I really thought about the female body and that I was any bit attracted to the ladies as well as the men. I think I sort of confused attraction with body envy. It was not until I was around 11 or 12 when I sat downstairs watching, rewinding, and re-watching the scene in Titanic where you got to see Kate Winslet's boob that I realized it was more than just a little girl wanting to have a womanly figure. I was bisexual." — Gigi, 22
"I'm bisexual and gender fluid. I had my first crush on a girl at summer camp in second grade, but I didn't realize I was gender fluid until I was much older. I spent several years at a time in periods of hyper-femininity and hyper-masculinity. It was constant confusion over whether I was a cisgender girl or a transgender guy. About halfway through high school, I got involved in the LGBT+ community when I became open about my sexuality, and I learned about non-binary genders and genderfluidity through my school's gay-straight alliance. It was exciting to suddenly have an explanation for all the ambiguity surrounding my own identity." — Arin, 17
"During my freshman year, my best friend in the world slowly turned into my crush. She was gay and she would talk about one person or another that had feelings for her, and at one point I realized that I was one of those people." — Julia, 17
"I don't really have a memory of not being attracted to just boys, but the first time I acted on that, I was nine and I made out with my female friend. I didn't realize what that meant really until I was 12-ish and connected the dots like, 'Oh, wait, that's not normal. That means I'm queer.' I've never thought of it as a bad thing, but I've always been very aware of my parent's negative views on that. (They're very, very Christian, very involved in the church, and my mom is very southern.) As far as my gender goes, when I was eight or nine I really, really wanted to be a boy, but since then I've decided I feel more fluid or gender-neutral." — Makayla, 17
"My whole life, I always knew something was different about me. I always wanted to be super close with some of my friends that were girls and got along better with most of the guys. In eighth grade, one of my friends came out to me as bisexual, and when I asked her what that was, her description explained the feelings I had been having my whole life. I never had crushes on male celebrities or wondered who my Prince Charming would be. I dated men when I was younger, but it never worked out. My relationships mostly ended because I just became uninterested or too uncomfortable. I realized after awhile I was dating these guys to have a companion, not because I was attracted to them. I've accepted that as awesome as guys can be, they just aren't for me. I'm a lesbian." — Jen, 21
"I'm bisexual. In fourth grade, I had a crush on a girl. I wrote her notes and my friends would help me plan out how to talk to her. I even wrote her a song in my music class. At the time, though, I didn't register that I had feelings for a girl. My friends and I all thought I just really wanted to befriend her. As I grew up, I found myself
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