Another article titled " Who are the Gay Evangelicals " explored the phenomenon of anti-LGBT Evangelical Christians who openly admit to being LGBT themselves. Despite the apparent bi-erasure in the title, the author quotes one woman as saying: "I'm still mentally, emotionally and spiritually attracted to women... bisexual with celibate same-sex attraction." The author adds, "despite coming to terms with her bisexuality, Ms. Postell hopes for a heterosexual marriage one day." The last example is particularly note-worthy, because it dispels a pervasive biphobic myth: that bisexuality is "a phase" that is ultimately resolved when someone "chooses a side." Here, we are presented with a person who acknowledges the permanence of her bisexual attraction. While religious beliefs may motivate her to refrain from acting upon her same sex attractions , she acknowledges that they nevertheless exist. And most significantly, that she expects them to persist through her future marriage to a man. In all three articles, bisexuality was not the primary subject of the piece, yet bisexuality was referenced for color, as an example, casually and without prejudice. This is a very positive sign. It means that bisexuality is better understood and is becoming more accepted (at least among some). For these journalists, the existence of bisexuality is now a permanent part of their worldview, so much so that reference to it it has entered their literary lexicon. The orientation (and the people who represent it) have gone from being ignored and actively erased by the media to being part of society's grand narrative. There's much work still to be done, but let's hope the trend continues!