Today, Stonewall published their LGBT in Britain – Work Report which has found one in three LGBT people fear telling colleagues their sexuality or gender identity. Whilst this figure alone is shocking, the report found that some of the biggest issues are felt by bisexual men.

According to the survey, 49 percent of bi men are not out to anyone at work, compared to seven per cent of gay men and four per cent of lesbians.

Bisexuality is nothing new, documented in artwork as far back as Ancient Greece and seen just about everywhere in the animal kingdom. So why is it so hard for a man to openly declare he is bisexual in 2018?

What this really comes down to is society not understanding men well enough, in particular how their sexuality works. Recently researchers at Cornell University concluded that men are never 100pc straight. By measuring eye dilation when exposed to both male and female solo pornography, they came to the conclusions that "straight people do not exist."

The concept, of men's sexuality being a spectrum, is nothing new. In 2016, YouGov found 43pc of 18-24 year-olds in the UK do not identify as entirely gay or straight. Another study, published by Kinsey, suggests that around 60pc of pre-adolescent boys engage in some type of homosexual activity. And YouPorn have documented that straight men watch gay porn a quarter of the time (your porn history doesn’t lie).