The Half-Elf
Half-accepted, half-loved

1.
It starts in a club, as so many crucifixions do.
-
Seven years ago, today.
Neon spills on my chest like fake blood.
My wife—full lesbian, full moon—orders something tart, something red.
I order nothing. I drink her gaze.
She’s always been better at restraint,
while I suck at silence like it’s a kink.
I’m the one who talks during movies, cries during sex,
and flirts like I’m daring the world to prove I don’t belong.
-
And when the femme at the bar makes a joke—
“Wait—you let her marry a bi girl? That’s… bold. I mean, I love bi babes, don’t get me wrong, but I could never sign up for all that uncertainty. Too many open tabs, you know? One minute it’s you, the next it’s Chad from accounting with a vape and a Spotify playlist.”
She laughs like she’s just said something empowering.
-
I laugh too loud.
-
Because if I don’t, I’ll say something like,
“Sweetheart, your trauma’s showing. Tuck it back in.”
(Suck at silence—remember?)
Which won’t help.
She doesn’t want a conversation—she wants a confirmation.
-
But the label sticks like a parking ticket on a stolen car.
Bi.
Two-lane traffic. No destination welcome.
A fencepost to piss on by both sides.
Too straight for lesbians. Too queer for straights.
Always asked for credentials I never agreed to carry.
-
2.
We go home and I bed my wife like a protest.
My mouth, a banner. My fingers, a chant.
She comes like an apology she didn’t owe me.
And afterward, I cry.
-
Not because she doesn't love me—she does.
She loves with the intensity of someone who once had to claw her own name back from silence.
But she loves me despite the shady gender options I present.
She doesn’t say it. She would never.
But I can feel it: the world pressing through her fingertips, asking her if I’m
enough.
-
Because even inside love, I am a glitch in the matrix.
A creature of the seam, stitched from contradictions.
I tell her I’m fine, and she kisses my forehead like a lie she’s agreed to believe.
I fall asleep feeling like a border checkpoint.
-
3.
Pride Month.
-
I wear my fishnets like battle armor and a cropped tee that says “FULLY BI-FURIOUS.”
And I dance like I’m trying to set the rainbow on fire.
My hips chant. My boots testify.
I don’t sip drinks. I devour them.
-
A drag king slaps my ass and says “That’s our girl.”
A gay boy calls me “our emotional support slut.”
I say nothing because being wanted in fragments still counts as presence, right?
-
Until the dyke collective girlies pull me aside—
Leather jackets, shaved temples, moral clarity as rigid as a strap-on.
“You really shouldn’t take up space here,” one says. “Go back to your husband.”
-
I say, “I don’t have one.”
She sneers. “Same thing.”
-
And there it is.
That bone-deep reminder that no matter how queer you prance,
if they can’t box you, they’ll exile you.
That bisexuality isn’t proof of solidarity—it’s treated like a smudge on the lens.
Something to wipe away from the pristine gender spectrum—for the sake of a goddamn unicorn-fart rainbow.
-
I want to slash her with my words,
but my mouth is full of ash.
I am loud in the wrong key.
A song they don’t recognize.
Not queer enough to love, not straight enough to leave alone.
-
4.
My wife finds me later, exiled under a blinking neon pint,
where even the dark feels homonormative.
She touches my wrist like she’s reading my pulse for messages.
She asks what's wrong, and I say, “I think I’m a ghost.”
She says, “You always were. That’s why I saw you.”
-
She kisses me like exorcism.
And for a moment, I exist.
Salt and skin. Bone and bruise. No prefix required.
-
5.
But you can't make a home in someone else's ribcage.
Even when they leave the door open.
Even when they hand you keys and say stay.
Even when they paint their heart in your colors.
-
Later, I join a band.
We’re called Polyphonic Spite—
because Polyamory was taken and Fuck You wasn’t on Spotify.
-
We play dive bars and queer co-ops.
I wear elf ears and sing in broken Latin.
Our drummer is trans and deaf in one ear.
Our bassist is ace and plays barefoot with a prop knife between her teeth.
Our lead guitarist is nonbinary and writes riffs like they’re breaking spells.
-
We write songs like rage bouquets.
We scream open letters.
We make noise like it owes us backpay.
-
At our first gig, I yell into the mic:
-
“This song is for the bi girls who got called tourists.
For the fluid boys they said were confused.
For the nonbinary babes who took off their pronouns like armor
just to survive one more dinner with family.
For the ones who loved loud and were told it wasn’t real.
For the ones who didn’t stay in one lane—and got hit from both sides!”
-
The crowd howls like wolves.
I howl louder.
I howl until I burn out memories.
I howl until my knees buckle and the lights bloom into stars I can name.
-
Until the speaker shorts out.
Until I burst a vein in my throat and taste copper.
Until I realize I’m crying and I don’t remember when it started.
-
I go home alone.
Wife’s on a work trip.
I lie in bed with the bass still ringing in my bones.
The room smells like salt and feedback.
I curl around the ache like it’s a familiar shape.
-
And it hits me—
-
They don’t hate me for being bi.
They hate that I survive it with glitter in my blood.
They hate that I still dance.
That I write love songs without permission.
That I make noise.
That I refuse to shrink.
That I didn’t choose a side and bleed allegiance.
-
The pressure wants a diamond.
And I’m not a diamond.
I’m a bloody Molotov.
-
6.
Weeks later, I get invited back to that same Pride collective.
-
Not as a guest.
As a performer.
-
Same girl from before is running sound now.
She won’t look me in the eyes.
-
I play anyway.
I leave the elf ears at home.
Wear my scars like mascara.
My truth doesn’t need a costume—just a mic.
-
And when the set ends, I don’t wait for applause.
I say:
-
“I am not your mascot. I'm not your myth.
I am not your buffer zone between real gay and straight girl gone wild.
I am the thing you couldn’t cancel because I was never on your schedule.”
-
Silence first.
Then a scream.
Then a ripple of claps like thunder with bad timing.
It’s not gratitude—it’s recognition.
Which counts as a win, right?
It has to.
-
7.
That night, my wife texts me.
“You still up?”
I reply: “I’m always up. Too loud to sleep.”
-
She sends a selfie—smiling, lipstick smudged, a little drunk.
Then: “You’re a legend.”
-
I text back: “Legends are dead things. I’m still causing problems.”
She replies: “Good. Stay unsaintly.”
-
So here I am.
Seven years later.
Unsaintly, as ordered.
Still dancing.
Still slutty.
Still inconvenient.
(OK, granted, a mum as well, but—)
Still a glitch.
Still a problem.
-
And goddamn it, I never looked more divine.
.
Author’s Note:
This isn't fiction—it’s a field report from the bisexual front lines.
I’m a bi woman married to a lesbian. You’d think that’d be simple: two women in love. But apparently, the “B” in LGBTQIA+ still stands for “Bullshit assumptions.”
People expected me to cheat. To leave. To “realize something.” Because, you know, being bi means I’m just one awkward brunch away from ruining everything. Spoiler: I didn’t cheat. I didn’t leave. I just committed—radically, beautifully, inconveniently.
But let’s not pretend it was easy. I’ve been policed by both sides: Too queer for the straights. Too straight for the queers. Gatekeeping dressed up as community. Side-eyes served with rainbow cocktails.
And I’m not imagining it—studies show bi folks face higher rates of depression, anxiety, and partner violence than anyone else on the damn spectrum. We’re also the least likely to be out. Because y’all make it a minefield.
So here’s a radical idea:
Stop treating us like the villain in your breakup origin story.
We’re not confused. We’re just done explaining ourselves. Give the bi’s some room.
We’re not tourists.
We live here too.
.
About the Creator
Iris Obscura
Do I come across as crass?
Do you find me base?
Am I an intellectual?
Or an effed-up idiot savant spewing nonsense, like... *beep*
Is this even funny?
I suppose not. But, then again, why not?
Read on...
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Comments (13)
I just read Bill's piece in which he stated that Bisexuals are often expected to pick a side. It was something new to me. I just thought the LGBTQIA+ community is accepting of everyone for who they are. So then Bill directed me to your piece here and said I'd understand more about it. I did and I'm so sorry for your experience. Sending you lots of love and hugs ❤️
I'm sharing this with others. You are an amazing artist.
This is absolutely incredible!!! I'm bi. I entered the Pride challenge... but damn! This is just beyond remarkable compared to my offerings! I'm Bill. I found you through Queer Vocal Voice on FB. It's a honor. ⚡💙⚡
WOW! Like everyone else has said, this is incredibly powerful. From another bi (and polyam to add even more mess lol) girl, your wife hit it right on: stay unsaintly 💖
Iris, this was so, so powerful—I have no words. You are an inspiration for making space in the spaces that try to condemn you and box you in. I’m sorry people are so cruel. The “cheating” implication/expectation people jump to that seems to come along with the perception of female bisexuality always gets to me, because it’s so ridiculously insulting and vapid. It pushes the agenda that a woman who likes men in any way must still want to center men deep down, that we’ll always put men first and above women, which is a very dangerous narrative. From one bi girl to another, you are so incredibly valid, and you belong. “I say nothing because being wanted in fragments still counts as presence” absolutely blew me away in particular.
I absolutely love the power in this piece, Iris! You have such a strong and unique voice, and it really comes through in your writing. Congrats on the very well-deserved Top Story! 🎉
It's one of the things that still hurts about our son. He insisted he didn't believe that people were bi-. He claimed they were just afraid to come out of the closet & commit to who they were. My only explanation for it is that most people seemed to assume he was gay from early on, but he didn't fully admit it to himself until high school, at which point he came fully & unapologetically out. I still believe that if he had lived a little longer he would have been able to embrace a much more diverse & inclusive understanding of sexuality & gender. Unfortunately, he died one month before high school graduation. I can't imagine what it's like having to navigate what is already an explosive minefield where even those who are allies are trying to figure out what shape peg you are so that they can plug you into a readily defined slot. Kudos to you for refusing to be silenced, shunted into the shadows & disappeared. Keep screaming for those who have not found the courage themselves. But most of all, keep screaming for yourself. Don't let them ever not see you or know you are there.
Great
Bi people deserve more dignity and respect than the community gives them. They're always good people.
THIS. Damn. You wow how do I even put words together. How do I even start. Just goosebumps. Just power. Just wow. (Insert joke about being a writer who can’t think of words) But seriously, this is so incredibly rad and riot. So much truth spilled into poetic prose. So many absolutely killer lines. But also thank you for raising the mic and screaming this out because the amount of biphobia in the queer community is flat out embarrassing. Enough with the lateral violence and gatekeeping (of what even??!). My wife is bi and I am gay (I prefer gay as a genderfluid lesbian), and while we haven’t talked as much about in a while (we’re married now 3 years), I know that biphobia from others definitely still trickles in. Not so much from the queer community as we don’t have the biggest, but more from hetero folk who don’t understand (nor care to) why suddenly she’s with a white woman (insert intersectional discourse) but before was only with men (not true but not their business). ANYWAYS. I see you, and you are no glitch. You are glitter and you better get in their damn biphobic eyes!
🩷💜💙
This description really hits home. The bit about being a "glitch in the matrix" sums up the bi experience so well. I've seen friends go through similar struggles with labels. It's like you're constantly on the outside, no matter which group you try to fit into. How do you think society could better understand and accept bisexuality? And why do you think there's still so much confusion and judgment around it?
Awesome Work Iris! Your writing is captivating, and it presents a unique perspective on the challenges of self-discovery and acceptance in a magical setting. Keep it up!!!