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These Guys Are Proof: Bisexual Dads Exist!

Back in 2020, Gays With Kids received the following message via one of our social media channels:

“Hey guys, love what you do. But where are your stories about bi men who are dads? Do they not exist? I get the sense from your page that most queer dads identify as gay. I identify as bi (or pansexual) and want to become a dad one day, but just never see my story represented. Are they just not out there?”

First, dear reader, we can assure you that, YES, bisexual dads absolutely exist. In fact, of all the letters in our acronym, far more LGBTQ parents fall into the “bi” category than any other.

That said, it is true…we just don’t have nearly enough representation of bisexual/pansexual dads here on Gays With Kids, or throughout the mainstream and queer media either.

While we occasionally find stories to tell about bi dads, like the great one below (originally shared earlier this year from a dad who had just come out), we just typically don’t hear from bi or pansexual dads. This is no doubt caused by any number of factors, for example, societal pressure to stay closeted from both the straight and LGBTQ communities along with erasure of bisexuality.

But perhaps this is at least partly thanks to our own doing, as we just haven’t done the best job reaching out specifically to the bi dads within our community!

We hope to start changing that immediately by sharing three different bi dad stories below.

(Are you a bi dad? Click here so we can help tell your story and increase visibility of bi dads, or reach out to us directly via  dads@gayswithkids.com)

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James Shoemaker, bisexual dad of three, in Alton Illinois

James Shoemaker, who is 65-years-old and lives in Alton, Illinois, says he’s known he was bisexual since the age of five. Still he lived what he called a “happily socially heterosexual” life throughout his adolescence, until he had his first same-sex experience in college at the age of 18-years-old.
 
In his 20s, he began his first same-sex relationship with a man, which lasted about five years. But soon the conversation turned towards children. James wanted his own biological children, something that would have been difficult, particularly at the time, to achieve. He and his boyfriends split, and soon after James met the woman who would become his wife. Since he had previously been in a relationship with a man, and his friends and family were aware of his sexuality, there was no hiding his bisexuality from his wife.
 
“We were both in our 30’s, and both wanted kids,” James said. “We were both kind of desperate to find a partner and she expressed that.”

He and his wife proceeded to have three daughters together and lived what he called a fairly “conventional” life. “There was so much societal support [for raising a family] within conventional marriage,” he said. “This was new to me, since I came out at age 17, and was used to being ‘different’.”

Being in a relationship with a woman, James said, alienated him from much of the LGBTQ activism that began to take hold in the 1980s and 1990s. “I felt I could not act as a representative for gay rights while married to a woman and raising kids with her,” he said.

When his youngest daughter turned 18, he and his wife split and, and James began, once again, to date other men. Eventually, he met Paul Mutphy, who he has been dating for four years. Since reentering the world dating another man, he’s had to confront, at times, people’s misconceptions about his bisexuality. “It’s not just gay guys looking for more social acceptance,” James said, noting that “Bi rights” has not really caught the public’s attention in the same way as “gay rights”.

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Maxwell Hosford, bi trans dad of one, in Yakima Washington

Maxwell Hosford, who lives in Yakima, Washington, came out as bisexual when he was 13-years-old. “I was still questioning myself,” he said “and the term bisexual seemed to fit me.”

A year later, when he was 14, Maxwell also came out as trans. “I had heard about Chaz Bono on the radio one morning before school and it got me thinking,” he said. “I realized that I wasn’t the only one who felt that way and that there was a term for how I’ve felt.”

Though people often conflate sexual orientation and gender identity, Maxwell stressed that he sees his identity as trans and bisexual as perfectly natural. “I see them interacting in a way of fluidity,” he said. “Not straight but not gay. Just a feeling of love.”

Maxwell described his path to parenthood as a bit of an accident. “I was on testosterone for two years but had a four-week break because i was switching doctors,” he said. During that break, Maxwell ended up getting pregnant, and wasn’t aware of the pregnancy for several months after. “I just thought my body was just being weird from starting T again,” he said. Once he took the test and saw the two pink lines, though he knew his life was about to change forever. He went to Planned Parenthood the very next day.

Being pregnant while trans, Maxwell said, was an incredible experience. “I was comfortable enough with my gender identity that I didn’t have very much dysphoria,” he said, though he noted he did face a lot of misgendering from strangers. “But I understood that because I did have a big ole pregnant belly,” he said. He was grateful for his medical team who all referred to him according to the correct pronouns.

Soon after, his son Harrison was born. As soon as he held him in his arms, Maxwell said the entire process was worth it. “All the misgendering, all the questions and people misunderstanding doesn’t matter once you have that baby in your arms nothing matters but that little bundle of joy.”

Three years ago, Maxwell met his current fiancé, Chase Heiserman, via a gay dating app, and the three now live together as a family. He says he couldn’t be happier, but he does face some difficulty as a bi trans man within his broader community. “In some peoples eyes my fiancé and I are a straight couple because I’m trans and he’s cisgender,” he said. Some of the difficulty has even stemmed from other trans men. “I’ve had some bad comments from other transmen regarding my pregnancy and how it doesn’t make me trans,” he said, noting he continues to fight the perception that he is not “trans enough” because he chose to carry his own baby.

Through it all, though, Maxwell says becoming a father has been the biggest blessing in his life. “Being able to carry my baby and bond through those nine months was amazing,” he said. “I’m breastfeeding, which is hard as I’m trans, and so I’m self conscious of my large breasts now but it’s such a bonding experience that it doesn’t matter when I see the look of love and the comfort he gets from it.”

For other gay, bi and trans men considering fatherhood, Maxwell has this simple piece of advice: “Go for it.”

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Michael MacDonald, bi dad of two, in Monterery California

Michael MacDonald, who is 28-years-old and living in Monterey California, says he came out as bisexual over two years ago. He has two daughters, who are four and two-and-a-half years old, that were born while he was married to his ex-wife. “My children are amazing,” he said. “They have been so incredibly strong and brave having mom in one house and dad in another.”

Both children were fairly young when Michael and his ex separated, so “they didn’t really break a deeply ingrained idea of what a family unit is like. They have always just sort of known that mom and dad don’t live together.”

Co-parenting isn’t always easy, Michael said, noting it’s “one of the hardest things in the world.” He and his ex overcome any potential difficulty, though, by always putting the children first. “As long as they are happy, healthy and loved, that is all that matters,” he said. “I’m so fortunate to have such an incredible/pain in the butt partner to help me raise these amazing little girls.”

Though the separation was hard on all of them, Michael said it’s also been an amazing experience watching his children’s resiliency. “I am so proud of the beautiful little people they are,” he said. “Their adaptability, courage and love is something really spectacular.”

Since the separation, Michael hasn’t been in a serious relationship, but he has dated both men and women, something he says has been “absolutely challenging. Not only does he need to overcome all the typical challenges of a newly divorced parent (“Do they like kids? Would they be a good stepparent?”) but also the added stresses of being bisexual. “It can sometimes just be a bit too much for some women to handle,” he said.

He has been intentional about making sure his children have known, from a young age, that “daddy likes girls and boys,” he said. “They have grown up seeing me interact with people I’ve dated in a romantic way, like hand holding, abd expressing affection, so I think as they get older it’s not something that will ever really seem foreign or different to them to see me with a man or woman,” he said.

In his dates with other men, Michael says most guys tend to be surprised to learn that he has biological children. “But once I explain that I am bisexual, it’s usually much more easily understood,” he said. He is more irritated, though, when people question or outright refuse to recognize his bisexuality. “While I understand and have witnessed many guys who use bisexuality as a “stepping stone” of sorts when coming out,” he said, it does not mean that “bisexuality is not real or valid.”

As a bisexual dad, he also says he can feel isolated at times within the broader parenting community. “It can be a little intimidating feeling like you don’t really belong to one side or another,” he said. “There’s this huge network of gay parents, and, of course straight parents. Being sort of in the middle can sometimes create a feeling of isolation”

The biggest misconception about bisexual dads who have split with their wives, he said, is that sexual orientation isn’t always the reason for the separation. “When my ex wife and I separated, while my bisexuality did play a small part in it, it was not the reason we separated,” he said. He added that while life might not be perfect, it’s good. “My children are happy, healthy, and loved,” he said. “That’s really what matters the most.”

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