Personally, I can't say I believe in the view that everyone is a little bi, that you could potentially find a member of the opposite (or same depending on orientation) that you are attracted to. I know a few people over here who are gay, totally not attracted to women and who fought against it, struggled against it, tried to make themselves attracted to women, tried to go to those god-awful conversions camps, tried everything who, in the end, were still attracted to only men. And here they have every incentive to not be gay. I really don't think it's a choice because I have seen people struggle not to make that 'choice' and fail. I don't think some people can be attracted to members of the opposite sex, I've seen people try mightily and fail. I think it's simply a part of who you are, a part you do not choose but a part that you, simply.....are. Much like you do not choose your race and you do not choose things like how tall you are your sexual orientation is not a choice.
I've never been a fan of hearing that everyone is a little "bi," honestly. Mainly because the only two versions of "bi" out there that I know of (which in a way is amusing that there's two) don't really mesh with what I'm saying. One means that someone is attracted to both sexes, the other means that someone is attracted to one...but is curious about trying the other.
I'm not saying that everyone is automatically attracted to both sexes at the beginning. What I
am saying is that I believe it's not set in the beginning, and that everyone has the
possibility to go in either or direction or both depending on factors in their life, environment, upbringing, society, and the like.
If anything, I look at it more like a percentage than anything. For instance, I don't believe anyone is absolutely 100% either direction. Especially with the amount of supposed 100% heterosexual people that keep pouring out of the closet or dig themselves so deep in there that they're practically in China, I just don't buy that anyone can be 100% heterosexual or homosexual.
Granted, there are definitely people that definitely fall into being attracted to one as opposed to the other. As I said, I'm definitely far more attracted to men as opposed to women, and have yet to meet a woman that really checks those boxes for me. But again, I'm not going to absolutely toss out the possibility that such a woman doesn't exist. Maybe I just haven't met her yet, maybe I never will. The point is that I'm not going to discount the possibility just because I've yet to run into her.
I'll also add that there's a difference between finding what you're attracted to, and being forced into it. That's why the closet is such an issue in the first place, because people feel like they have to force others to be attracted in a specific way (because religion is such a fun moral compass to dictate people's lives, you know?). When you're forced to change as if it's a choice you can make or a light switch you can flip, it's obviously not going to come without problems, and it's also obviously going to end up being like a band-aid as opposed to a permanent "fix."
If anything, t's going to create issues in your own psyche because you have to deal with what you feel is correct versus what you're being told is correct. Some people can deflect such pressure and get out of it, others end up succumbing to the pressure and negativity and fall into the "closet" because of what they're told. Eventually those in the closet struggle with their own feelings because of that pressure pushed at them, and they either end up coming out of the closet or cheating on the side with someone of the same sex and continuing the charade.
But I've really yet to ever meet someone who was forcefully converted and actually was "successfully" turned. Because again, there's a difference between your own feelings and attraction changing, and it being forced on you.
I'll admit that I did say that society itself is a factor in what shapes our own attraction, and I still stand by it. But I mean that more in the sense of what we're
surrounded by and what we see on the daily basis, IE the media, our friends, family, what we see at our jobs and on the the streets, that sort of thing.
Just like I believe society in general can dictate how open we are with even talking about our sexuality (aka when we're surrounded throughout our lives by people who are open and positive, we find discussing our own sexuality much easier) and even our own personality, I also believe that it's a large part of the environmental factors that helps shape it.
But again, much like personality and other factors of ourselves, I also believe that our sexuality is more of a fluid thing rather than a solid structure, and is something that can change down the road rather than remain completely constant for our entire lives. Again, maybe it might be far down the road...or maybe it might not change at all, but that doesn't mean it doesn't have the capacity to.
But that is why I do agree with the idea of Pansexuality, despite it being another label/box. Because it throws out the idea of sexuality entirely and just says that you love who you love. Doesn't matter if that ends up being mostly men, mostly women, or evenly mixed. It's more about the person themselves rather than what they are in terms of sexuality or gender identity.