Robyn Exton, Mook Phanpinit, Jill O'Sullivan
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.
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Robyn Exton, Mook Phanpinit, Jill O'Sullivan
Mar 13, 2026
Talking about your dating history as a bisexual woman doesn’t have to feel like a performance. You’re not trying to “prove” your orientation or hand over a full resume of everyone you’ve ever dated. It’s about sharing what’s relevant for safety, trust, and connection.
A simple plan makes it easier: know why you’re sharing, choose the right moment, keep your language clear, and set boundaries when needed. If you encounter biphobic jokes or assumptions, you can correct, opt out, or walk away. Below is a practical guide with scripts, timing tips, and a decision framework aligned with HER’s emphasis on emotional safety and self-trust.
Before talking about past relationships, get clear on why you’re sharing. Purpose-first conversations help you stay focused and avoid oversharing.
Use a purpose-first checklist to decide what to share:
| Your goal | What’s relevant to share | Example one-liner |
| Establish trust | Orientation + a high-level summary (no roll call of exes) | “I’m bi and have dated different genders; I focus on values and compatibility now.” |
| Share health info | STI status, testing cadence, protection preferences | “I test every 3 months; I’d like to use barriers unless we decide to be fluid-bonded.” |
| Set boundaries | Timeframes, privacy limits, no-go topics | “Happy to share what’s relevant, but I don’t discuss the specifics of past partners.” |
| Push back on biphobia | A brief correction, then move on or exit | “Bi isn’t a phase for me. If that’s an issue, this won’t be a fit.” |
Selective, purpose-driven disclosure gives you agency and keeps your story yours.
Aim for a low-pressure moment where you both can listen. Many people find it helpful to mention orientation on a profile or early in conversation to avoid mismatches later, especially if you’re seeking a queer connection or clarity about monogamy/non-monogamy (see Columbia’s Go Ask Alice on when to tell a partner you’re bisexual).
Good moments:
Not-so-great moments:
It’s also okay to wait until mutual trust is established, especially if sharing details feels risky or you’ve dealt with erasure before. If you’ve internalized compulsory heterosexuality (societal pressure to prioritize straight relationships), naming it can help you claim your pace and boundaries (compulsory heterosexuality explained through lived experience).
Short, direct statements reduce the emotional labor of “proving” yourself and keep conversations grounded.
Try:
A brief, factual sentence builds trust without inviting a quiz or stereotypes; relationship educators consistently recommend clear, bounded statements for past-relationship talks (healthy communication skills). Create a few go-to lines, and remember you don’t owe answers to intrusive questions. If you encounter microaggressions or subtle, often unintentional comments or behaviors that invalidate identities, name the harm or opt out (see a university gender and sexuality terms glossary for definitions and context).
You might run into curiosity, support, or skepticism. Having ready replies helps you stay steady.
Common reactions and grounded responses:
Many bi women describe having to re-explain or “come out again” in new contexts, and that repetition can be exhausting; validating your limits and keeping responses brief can protect your energy (community accounts of repeated “coming out” experiences appear in bi women’s relationship stories). Practice your lines out loud. Boundary-setting isn’t rude. It’s how you create emotional safety and find partners who meet you with respect.
You never owe a detailed history. Share only what’s necessary for health, consent, and mutual understanding, and only when it feels safe.
Think of consent for personal disclosures the same way you do for intimacy: it’s freely given, informed, and reversible. A quick self-check can help:
If someone disregards your boundaries or treats your identity like a debate, you’re allowed to leave the conversation or the date. We’re officially giving you permission if you need it.
Back yourself up with community. Supportive spaces make it easier to handle doubts or microaggressions and to push back against identity erasure.
Try:
Peer support builds confidence, offers scripts that work, and reminds you you’re not alone.
The best time is when you feel safe and have begun building trust, often after you know some basics about each other or when the topic comes up naturally in conversation.
Use simple, direct language that centers your experience, and keep the scope relevant; honest, matter-of-fact framing attracts partners who genuinely see you.
Acknowledge their feelings and give space to process, but protect your boundaries; if the reaction is invalidating or unsafe, step back and seek support.
No. Share what feels relevant, safe, and necessary for the relationship rather than a full rundown.
It sets a tone of honesty and trust, clarifies values and boundaries, and reduces surprises later.
Robyn Exton, Mook Phanpinit, Jill O'Sullivan
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.