Casually inserting sexualityDoes this snippet meander too much?How to make a character that doesn't speak...

Casually inserting sexuality

Whom do I have to contact for a ticket refund in case of denied boarding (in the EU)?

Second-rate spelling

Which aircraft had such a luxurious-looking navigator's station?

What am I? I am in theaters and computer programs

Why is working on the same position for more than 15 years not a red flag?

I am on the US no-fly list. What can I do in order to be allowed on flights which go through US airspace?

Why does Starman/Roadster have radial acceleration?

Can you use a beast's innate abilities while polymorphed?

Why do members of Congress in committee hearings ask witnesses the same question multiple times?

How to tighten battery clamp?

What is a term for a function that when called repeatedly, has the same effect as calling once?

How can I handle a player who pre-plans arguments about my rulings on RAW?

How can I be pwned if I'm not registered on that site?

Can this function be rewritten with a regex?

Contradiction with Banach Fixed Point Theorem

Six real numbers so that product of any five is the sixth one

Linear regression when Y is bounded and discrete

Closure of presentable objects under finite limits

Should I choose Itemized or Standard deduction?

What is this waxed root vegetable?

How do I construct an nxn matrix?

Is there a German word for “analytics”?

How to speed up a process



Casually inserting sexuality


Does this snippet meander too much?How to make a character that doesn't speak about himself relatable?How to write a homosexual character, whose homosexuality isn't the point of the story?'Filling' up a school setting without making a bunch of new characters?character introduction - should the character's name be repeated multiple times?Issue of tense and breaking the fourth wall/metaHow do I convey that a relationship is platonic?Is my story “too diverse”?













4















My main character, Eris, in my post-apocalyptic novel is queer. Her first love interest, Caspian, is male, but further on in the story I'm going to introduce a secondary love interest, Marina. As far as the reader knows, Eris is straight, because the only person she has expressed romantic interest in is Caspian, a guy. So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways without the reader being confused by the time she, Marina, and Caspian are in a love triangle?










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    if you were yourself is such a situation I imagine you wouldn't immediately understand your feelings as your sexuality shifts. Writing the characters own confusion during the transition seems a straight forward solution

    – BKlassen
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @BKlassen bisexuality isn't necessarily confusion.

    – bruglesco
    46 mins ago











  • Are you looking for foreshadowing, so the reveal doesn't feel forced or abrupt? Or casual, as @Amadeus answered?

    – bruglesco
    45 mins ago











  • @bruglesco no, and my comment refers to the transitory confusion between one sexuality and another not that a sexual preference is confused

    – BKlassen
    33 mins ago











  • @BKlassen The reader perhaps being confused is not the same as the character being confused. Sexuality is not binary! Bisexuality (and pansexuality) is not a fringe state of being. It's common and mainstream. The only confusion is from people who don't understand what bisexuality means!

    – Cyn
    16 mins ago
















4















My main character, Eris, in my post-apocalyptic novel is queer. Her first love interest, Caspian, is male, but further on in the story I'm going to introduce a secondary love interest, Marina. As far as the reader knows, Eris is straight, because the only person she has expressed romantic interest in is Caspian, a guy. So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways without the reader being confused by the time she, Marina, and Caspian are in a love triangle?










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    if you were yourself is such a situation I imagine you wouldn't immediately understand your feelings as your sexuality shifts. Writing the characters own confusion during the transition seems a straight forward solution

    – BKlassen
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @BKlassen bisexuality isn't necessarily confusion.

    – bruglesco
    46 mins ago











  • Are you looking for foreshadowing, so the reveal doesn't feel forced or abrupt? Or casual, as @Amadeus answered?

    – bruglesco
    45 mins ago











  • @bruglesco no, and my comment refers to the transitory confusion between one sexuality and another not that a sexual preference is confused

    – BKlassen
    33 mins ago











  • @BKlassen The reader perhaps being confused is not the same as the character being confused. Sexuality is not binary! Bisexuality (and pansexuality) is not a fringe state of being. It's common and mainstream. The only confusion is from people who don't understand what bisexuality means!

    – Cyn
    16 mins ago














4












4








4








My main character, Eris, in my post-apocalyptic novel is queer. Her first love interest, Caspian, is male, but further on in the story I'm going to introduce a secondary love interest, Marina. As far as the reader knows, Eris is straight, because the only person she has expressed romantic interest in is Caspian, a guy. So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways without the reader being confused by the time she, Marina, and Caspian are in a love triangle?










share|improve this question














My main character, Eris, in my post-apocalyptic novel is queer. Her first love interest, Caspian, is male, but further on in the story I'm going to introduce a secondary love interest, Marina. As far as the reader knows, Eris is straight, because the only person she has expressed romantic interest in is Caspian, a guy. So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways without the reader being confused by the time she, Marina, and Caspian are in a love triangle?







creative-writing characters character-development






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 1 hour ago









weakdnaweakdna

2,93631854




2,93631854








  • 1





    if you were yourself is such a situation I imagine you wouldn't immediately understand your feelings as your sexuality shifts. Writing the characters own confusion during the transition seems a straight forward solution

    – BKlassen
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @BKlassen bisexuality isn't necessarily confusion.

    – bruglesco
    46 mins ago











  • Are you looking for foreshadowing, so the reveal doesn't feel forced or abrupt? Or casual, as @Amadeus answered?

    – bruglesco
    45 mins ago











  • @bruglesco no, and my comment refers to the transitory confusion between one sexuality and another not that a sexual preference is confused

    – BKlassen
    33 mins ago











  • @BKlassen The reader perhaps being confused is not the same as the character being confused. Sexuality is not binary! Bisexuality (and pansexuality) is not a fringe state of being. It's common and mainstream. The only confusion is from people who don't understand what bisexuality means!

    – Cyn
    16 mins ago














  • 1





    if you were yourself is such a situation I imagine you wouldn't immediately understand your feelings as your sexuality shifts. Writing the characters own confusion during the transition seems a straight forward solution

    – BKlassen
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @BKlassen bisexuality isn't necessarily confusion.

    – bruglesco
    46 mins ago











  • Are you looking for foreshadowing, so the reveal doesn't feel forced or abrupt? Or casual, as @Amadeus answered?

    – bruglesco
    45 mins ago











  • @bruglesco no, and my comment refers to the transitory confusion between one sexuality and another not that a sexual preference is confused

    – BKlassen
    33 mins ago











  • @BKlassen The reader perhaps being confused is not the same as the character being confused. Sexuality is not binary! Bisexuality (and pansexuality) is not a fringe state of being. It's common and mainstream. The only confusion is from people who don't understand what bisexuality means!

    – Cyn
    16 mins ago








1




1





if you were yourself is such a situation I imagine you wouldn't immediately understand your feelings as your sexuality shifts. Writing the characters own confusion during the transition seems a straight forward solution

– BKlassen
1 hour ago





if you were yourself is such a situation I imagine you wouldn't immediately understand your feelings as your sexuality shifts. Writing the characters own confusion during the transition seems a straight forward solution

– BKlassen
1 hour ago




1




1





@BKlassen bisexuality isn't necessarily confusion.

– bruglesco
46 mins ago





@BKlassen bisexuality isn't necessarily confusion.

– bruglesco
46 mins ago













Are you looking for foreshadowing, so the reveal doesn't feel forced or abrupt? Or casual, as @Amadeus answered?

– bruglesco
45 mins ago





Are you looking for foreshadowing, so the reveal doesn't feel forced or abrupt? Or casual, as @Amadeus answered?

– bruglesco
45 mins ago













@bruglesco no, and my comment refers to the transitory confusion between one sexuality and another not that a sexual preference is confused

– BKlassen
33 mins ago





@bruglesco no, and my comment refers to the transitory confusion between one sexuality and another not that a sexual preference is confused

– BKlassen
33 mins ago













@BKlassen The reader perhaps being confused is not the same as the character being confused. Sexuality is not binary! Bisexuality (and pansexuality) is not a fringe state of being. It's common and mainstream. The only confusion is from people who don't understand what bisexuality means!

– Cyn
16 mins ago





@BKlassen The reader perhaps being confused is not the same as the character being confused. Sexuality is not binary! Bisexuality (and pansexuality) is not a fringe state of being. It's common and mainstream. The only confusion is from people who don't understand what bisexuality means!

– Cyn
16 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways ...



Casually! Have a conversation between Eris and Caspian, perhaps in bed, talking about sex.



An Example:




Caspian asked, "When was your first time? Like, full on?"



"With a girl, I guess full on means oral, so I was fifteen, I had this thing with a friend at school. Then she got religion and dumped me. Not with a guy until I was seventeen. I mean, I was willing, but no good candidates. And you?"



"When I was eighteen, with Elly. You know her?"



"Know her?" Eris laughed. "I would totally fuck that girl. Was she any good?"



"Yeah, I mean, we didn't know anything, but yeah. Very ... energetic."



Eris saw him grinning, and laughed again.




The conversation is casual pillow talk, Caspian is not surprised Eris is bisexual, Eris doesn't hesitate to reveal it.






share|improve this answer
























  • This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

    – weakdna
    14 mins ago



















2














I don't think you need to show anything special at all.



Lots of people have multiple love interests (or hookups) over the course of a novel. In some novels, it's the premise.



If a character's first relationship in the novel was to a tall blond German runner, you wouldn't think your readers would be confused when the next relationship is with a short bald Nigerian physics professor.



Let your reader be confused. Most readers will figure it out pretty quickly. The few that don't, well, they're the readers that wouldn't really get it after you explained it either.






share|improve this answer























    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "166"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fwriting.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f43003%2fcasually-inserting-sexuality%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways ...



    Casually! Have a conversation between Eris and Caspian, perhaps in bed, talking about sex.



    An Example:




    Caspian asked, "When was your first time? Like, full on?"



    "With a girl, I guess full on means oral, so I was fifteen, I had this thing with a friend at school. Then she got religion and dumped me. Not with a guy until I was seventeen. I mean, I was willing, but no good candidates. And you?"



    "When I was eighteen, with Elly. You know her?"



    "Know her?" Eris laughed. "I would totally fuck that girl. Was she any good?"



    "Yeah, I mean, we didn't know anything, but yeah. Very ... energetic."



    Eris saw him grinning, and laughed again.




    The conversation is casual pillow talk, Caspian is not surprised Eris is bisexual, Eris doesn't hesitate to reveal it.






    share|improve this answer
























    • This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

      – weakdna
      14 mins ago
















    3














    So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways ...



    Casually! Have a conversation between Eris and Caspian, perhaps in bed, talking about sex.



    An Example:




    Caspian asked, "When was your first time? Like, full on?"



    "With a girl, I guess full on means oral, so I was fifteen, I had this thing with a friend at school. Then she got religion and dumped me. Not with a guy until I was seventeen. I mean, I was willing, but no good candidates. And you?"



    "When I was eighteen, with Elly. You know her?"



    "Know her?" Eris laughed. "I would totally fuck that girl. Was she any good?"



    "Yeah, I mean, we didn't know anything, but yeah. Very ... energetic."



    Eris saw him grinning, and laughed again.




    The conversation is casual pillow talk, Caspian is not surprised Eris is bisexual, Eris doesn't hesitate to reveal it.






    share|improve this answer
























    • This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

      – weakdna
      14 mins ago














    3












    3








    3







    So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways ...



    Casually! Have a conversation between Eris and Caspian, perhaps in bed, talking about sex.



    An Example:




    Caspian asked, "When was your first time? Like, full on?"



    "With a girl, I guess full on means oral, so I was fifteen, I had this thing with a friend at school. Then she got religion and dumped me. Not with a guy until I was seventeen. I mean, I was willing, but no good candidates. And you?"



    "When I was eighteen, with Elly. You know her?"



    "Know her?" Eris laughed. "I would totally fuck that girl. Was she any good?"



    "Yeah, I mean, we didn't know anything, but yeah. Very ... energetic."



    Eris saw him grinning, and laughed again.




    The conversation is casual pillow talk, Caspian is not surprised Eris is bisexual, Eris doesn't hesitate to reveal it.






    share|improve this answer













    So how can I believably and casually show that Eris swings both ways ...



    Casually! Have a conversation between Eris and Caspian, perhaps in bed, talking about sex.



    An Example:




    Caspian asked, "When was your first time? Like, full on?"



    "With a girl, I guess full on means oral, so I was fifteen, I had this thing with a friend at school. Then she got religion and dumped me. Not with a guy until I was seventeen. I mean, I was willing, but no good candidates. And you?"



    "When I was eighteen, with Elly. You know her?"



    "Know her?" Eris laughed. "I would totally fuck that girl. Was she any good?"



    "Yeah, I mean, we didn't know anything, but yeah. Very ... energetic."



    Eris saw him grinning, and laughed again.




    The conversation is casual pillow talk, Caspian is not surprised Eris is bisexual, Eris doesn't hesitate to reveal it.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 51 mins ago









    AmadeusAmadeus

    52.9k467172




    52.9k467172













    • This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

      – weakdna
      14 mins ago



















    • This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

      – weakdna
      14 mins ago

















    This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

    – weakdna
    14 mins ago





    This is a book for teenagers and Eris has been isolated her whole life, she hasn't had any romantic experience besides her crush on Caspian. Eris is sixteen.

    – weakdna
    14 mins ago











    2














    I don't think you need to show anything special at all.



    Lots of people have multiple love interests (or hookups) over the course of a novel. In some novels, it's the premise.



    If a character's first relationship in the novel was to a tall blond German runner, you wouldn't think your readers would be confused when the next relationship is with a short bald Nigerian physics professor.



    Let your reader be confused. Most readers will figure it out pretty quickly. The few that don't, well, they're the readers that wouldn't really get it after you explained it either.






    share|improve this answer




























      2














      I don't think you need to show anything special at all.



      Lots of people have multiple love interests (or hookups) over the course of a novel. In some novels, it's the premise.



      If a character's first relationship in the novel was to a tall blond German runner, you wouldn't think your readers would be confused when the next relationship is with a short bald Nigerian physics professor.



      Let your reader be confused. Most readers will figure it out pretty quickly. The few that don't, well, they're the readers that wouldn't really get it after you explained it either.






      share|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2







        I don't think you need to show anything special at all.



        Lots of people have multiple love interests (or hookups) over the course of a novel. In some novels, it's the premise.



        If a character's first relationship in the novel was to a tall blond German runner, you wouldn't think your readers would be confused when the next relationship is with a short bald Nigerian physics professor.



        Let your reader be confused. Most readers will figure it out pretty quickly. The few that don't, well, they're the readers that wouldn't really get it after you explained it either.






        share|improve this answer













        I don't think you need to show anything special at all.



        Lots of people have multiple love interests (or hookups) over the course of a novel. In some novels, it's the premise.



        If a character's first relationship in the novel was to a tall blond German runner, you wouldn't think your readers would be confused when the next relationship is with a short bald Nigerian physics professor.



        Let your reader be confused. Most readers will figure it out pretty quickly. The few that don't, well, they're the readers that wouldn't really get it after you explained it either.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 11 mins ago









        CynCyn

        12.8k12763




        12.8k12763






























            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Writing Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fwriting.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f43003%2fcasually-inserting-sexuality%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            IEEEtran - How to include ORCID in TeX/PDF with PdfLatexIs there a standard way to include ORCID in TeX /...

            Cicindela nigrior Przypisy | Menu nawigacyjneCicindela varians unicolorManual for the Identification of the...

            Glossaries-extra: Adding glossaries package to “Clas­sicTh­e­sis” template by Dr. André Miede v. 4.6 ...