Too much? Excessive sexual experiences in bisexual women’s life stories

This article explores bisexual women’s sexual experiences at the edges of or between relationships. It draws on the follow-up interviews of a longitudinal interview set conducted in 2005 and 2014–2015 with bisexual women and their partners, who do not identify as bisexuals. Bisexual women’s spontaneous, detailed and affective narrations of sexual experiences in the follow-up interviews caught the author’s attention. Although the experiences were often narrated as pleasurable, they could be overwhelming, and women also expressed concern that they were excessive, “too much”. The analysis of the women’s accounts utilizes and develops a psychosocial concept of excess. It reveals that the excessiveness of the women’s sexual experiences is constituted by bisexuality and monogamy-related norms that restrict women’s sexuality, and also by the non-rational psychic dimensions of these experiences. Within the normative limits of feminine sexuality, sexuality’s excess often plays a propulsive role as the women strive to become sexual subjects.


Introduction
Marriage, cohabiting and gendered ways of being in relationships have become a matter of reflection and ''choice'' in contemporary Western societies following the individualization and democratization of intimate life (e.g., Adkins 2002; Barker and Langdridge 2010;Giddens 1992;Roseneil 2007). Yet many relationship-related hierarchies concerning gender and sexuality persist (Lahti 2015;Magnusson 2005;Farvid and Braun 2013). A monogamous couple relationship is still regarded as the most respectable way of organizing intimate life (Barker and Langdridge 2010;Farvid and Braun 2013), and has been the central vehicle through which same-sex desire has gained social acceptance Warner 2000). The couple norm remains strong as family life, and sociability are organized around couple relationships (DePaulo and Morris 2005;Ketokivi 2012).
Despite growing academic and public interest, non-monogamous ways of arranging intimate life remain marginalized (Barker and Langdridge 2010;van Hooff 2017). Yet there are ambivalences and tensions around contemporary monogamous couple relationships (Beck and Beck-Gernsheim 1995;Perel 2007;Shaw 2013). Alongside the persistence of ideas about romantic love, 'the one' and the couple, people are expected to pursue their personal life goals and express their individual selfhood through sexuality (Barker and Langdridge 2010;Beck and Beck-Gernsheim 1995;Gill 2008a, b). This tension may have become particularly pronounced in a culture of 'romantic renaissance' (Kontula and Mäkinen 2009). Attitudes towards infidelity in relationships have become judgmental to an increasing extent since the turn of the millennium (Kontula and Mäkinen 2009;van Hooff 2017).
These norms may have a particular effect on the lives of bisexual women, since bisexuality renders these tensions visible (Lahti under review). In this article, bisexuality refers to the experience of sexual attraction to or desire for more than one gender 1 (Barker and Langdridge 2008;Hayfield and Lahti 2017;Kangasvuo 2014;Monro 2015). In Western cultures, which emphasize the gendered body as an object choice of desire over other aspects of a person (Butler 1990), the notion of bisexuality draws attention to the excess of sexuality beyond the cultural ideal of the dyadic relationship. It interrogates the normative ideal of one partner who meets all our emotional and sexual needs (Lahti under review). People across sexuality and gender divides have to negotiate desires that exceed the monogamous ideal (Finn 2012), yet bisexuality is persistently culturally associated with hypersexuality and promiscuity (Gustavson 2009;Hayfield et al. 2014;Kangasvuo 2014;McLean 2004). Bisexual women thus engage in negotiations concerning sexual and relationship arrangements from a challenging cultural position, because relationship and sexuality-related norms may have particularly stigmatizing effects on them (Lahti under review;Klesse 2005).
Despite the recent ''sexualisation'' of popular culture and an increase in queer content in Western contexts since the mid-1990s (Gill 2008b;Karkulehto 2011;1 Sometimes my use of the term bisexuality is questioned and other terms such as pansexuality, sexual fluidity or queer are suggested instead as they are thought to be more inclusive and convey attraction to more than two genders. Bisexuality, because it has bi in it, literally two, is thought to refer to a twogender structure (Eisner 2013, p. 49). However, the usage of the term bisexuality has developed in concordance with the development of queer theory of gender. In the current academic discussion, and already in one of the earliest interdisciplinary collections on bisexuality, bisexuality was defined as an attraction to more than one gender (Firestein 1996). I do not see bisexuality and pansexuality as opposed to one another, but rather at least partly overlapping terms. Yet, often bisexuality is a more commonly known concept than pansexuality, which is the reason why I chose to use it in this research. Furthermore, participants of this research were originally recruited to the couple interviews in 2005 through a research request aimed at bisexual women and their partners. Mistry 2000), feminist scholars have addressed the difficulty of theorizing women's sexual subjectivity and desire on their own terms (Barker and Gill 2012). Gill (2007Gill ( , 2008a has turned attention to mainstream culture's ''post-feminist'' tendency to represent women's sexuality as autonomous and empoweringalthough these representations often resemble older sexual scripts that posit women as the object of male fantasy (Barker and Gill 2012;Kolehmainen 2012). The limits of women's sexuality have been refined: women should be sexual in (preferably heterosexual) couple relationships, but not too sexual or sexual in the wrong way (Harvey and Gill 2011;Moran and Lee 2014). When women engage in casual sex, it is often constructed as ''not a natural act'' (Farvid and Braun 2013). Despite its frequent cultural representation, casual sex is often constructed as a transitory and incomplete sexual arrangement (Farvid and Braun 2013). These constructions strengthen the status of sex in monogamous relationships as the most desirable sex (Farvid and Braun 2013;Finn 2012). This article analyses bisexual women's sexual experiences that are ''too much'' according to prevailing social norms regulating women's sexuality and monogamous relationships. To fully understand the excessive character of women's sexual experiences, it is necessary to bear in mind that sexuality is not only constrained by norms that dictate how women should be sexual (Harvey and Gill 2011;Moran and Lee 2014), but is also shaped by affective, non-rational psychic dimensions of relating (Johnson 2015;Roseneil 2006). This reflects the psychoanalytic notion of sexuality as something that unsettles the fantasy of a sovereign subject (Berlant and Edelman 2014;Butler 1991;Stein 2008). Nonsovereignty refers to our inability to know ourselves entirely or to be fully in control of ourselves (Berlant and Edelman 2014;Pirskanen 2008;Woodward 2015). This ''prompts our misrecognition of our own motives and desires'' (Berlant and Edelman 2014, p. viii).
In order to get an enriched view of the complex meanings of sexual exploration in women's lives, I will incorporate contemporary psychoanalytic thinking about sexuality as excess into my analysis (Benjamin and Atlas 2015;Stein 2008). My aims are to (1) develop a psychosocial understanding of sexual excess so that it encompasses both sexuality-related norms and non-rational, unconscious psychic dimensions, and (2) show that, without the concept of excess, it is impossible to understand women's sexual experiences in the context of their relational and affective sexual life stories.

Psychosocial exploration of sexuality's excess
By adopting a psychoanalytic concept of excess, I seek to work with aspects of experience that are not consciously known or easily represented linguisticallyoften referred to as affect (Baraitser and Frosh 2007;Blackman 2010;Koivunen 2010;Sedgwick 2003). I follow such feminist and queer approaches to affect, which continue to formulate new questions about sexual subjectivities by utilizing the critical potential of psychoanalytic thought (Berlant and Edelman 2014;Gregg and Seigworth 2010;Koivunen 2010, p. 59). My approach to subjectivity, sexuality and affect is thus psychosocial (Baraitser and Frosh 2007;Blackman et al. 2008;Johnson 2015;Woodward 2015).
Psychosocial research addresses the question of the relationship between the social and the psychic, which are seen as inextricably intertwined in psychosocial studies (Woodward 2015, p. 5). It incorporates a psychoanalytic understanding of the unconscious (Woodward 2015, p. 82), but also seeks to go beyond the universalism of psychoanalytic theory (Blackman et al. 2008;Lucey et al. 2003;Roseneil 2007;Walkerdine 2015). There has been heated debate about the nature of the relationship between ''inner'' and ''outer'' (Frosh and Baraitser 2008;Johnson 2015). My study draws on the notion that subjects and desires are formed in the intertwining of the ''internal'' psychic and ''external'' social, ''always immersed in a flux that is neither inside nor out'' (Frosh and Baraitser 2008, p. 354;Pirskanen 2008). Psychoanalytical concepts, such as excess, are often useful for analysing this interweavement (Frosh and Baraitser 2008).
In many poststructuralist theories, for example in Judith Butler's (psychosocial) performative theory of gender (1990,1991), the notion of excess marks ''the uncategorizable, the unsymbolizable, that which exceeds the regular frame imposed on it'' (Stein 2008, p. 48). For Butler (1990Butler ( , 1991, sexuality is excessive in the sense that it can never be fully expressed in a gender presentation or narrative. With the concept of excess, Butler refers to psychic space that always ''exceeds the domain of the conscious subject'' (Butler 1991, p. 315). However, this conceptualization alone does not explain why some sexual experiences are characterized by ''too muchness'' and ''excess'' (Benjamin and Atlas 2015;Stein 2008). Stein (2008) suggests that contemporary psychoanalytic thinking is necessary in order to explore the excessive, shame-linked and transgressive aspects of sexuality. Contemporary psychoanalytic thinking about sexuality as excess is strongly influenced by Laplanche (1987cited by Stein 2008and Benjamin and Atlas 2015, who theorizes it in terms of the early overwhelming of the psyche (Benjamin and Atlas 2015). The child is overwhelmed by the parent's excess-the parent is older and bigger, and the adult's unconscious messages about sexuality are too much for the child to contain in its psyche. Thus sexuality always begins with an unconscious communication from the (excessive) other (Laplanche 1987 cited by Benjamin and Atlas 2015).
Despite the universalizing tendencies of psychoanalytic theorizations of excess, Stein (2008) keeps the concept in motion by discussing it through different conceptualizations. She suggests that the various types of excess together constitute the compelling power of sexuality: ''the overstepping of boundaries, the sense of overbrimming with inordinate arousal that makes one feel it cannot be encompassed'' (Stein 2008, p. 44). Her discussion of sexual experiences that can ''sometimes be strange, excessive, 'perverse' and irrational'' (Stein 2008, p. 45) does not pathologize these experiences, but rather comes close to Kalha's (2007, pp. 27-28) queer reading of Freud (2000Freud ( /1905, for whom all desire is more or less perverse. Not only does excess transgress regulatory frames, as in poststructuralist theories (Stein 2008, p. 50), but it can also transgress boundaries between self and other, and within oneself (Stein 2008, p. 63). Therefore, in my psychosocial deployment of the concept of excess, I take seriously how social norms regulating bisexual women's sexuality may contribute to the ''feel'' of ''too muchness'' of women's sexual experiences. Yet, in order to gain an enriched view of the meanings of sexual exploration in women's lives, I have incorporated into my analysis psychoanalytic ideas of excess (Stein 2008) as (1) an actively pursued shattering of structure (Bersani 1995), (2) a way of dealing with our lonely, discontinuous being (Bataille 1957(Bataille , 1976; cited by Stein 2008, pp. 54-57), and (3) an (over)excitement that can turn from grace to abomination (Stein 2008). By showing that these ''social'' and ''psychic'' aspects of excess cannot be easily separated, but are inextricably intertwined in women's accounts of their sexual experiences, the article offers a new, psychosocial understanding of sexual excess.

Materials and methods
The article draws on a study on bisexuality and relationships that incorporates a longitudinal set of interviews. I conducted seven original couple interviews with bisexual women and their partners in 2005, and individual follow-ups in 2014-2015.
In the couple interviews, four of the bisexual women had female partners, two had male partners, and one woman's partner was a transman. None of the partners identified as bisexual. 2 For the follow-up interviews, I was able to reach 11 participants, 6 bisexual women and 5 (ex-) partners: two men and one woman, whose gender identities had stayed the same across both interview rounds. The expartner, who had identified as a transman in the couple interview, identified as a man in his follow-up interview. An ex-partner, who had identified as a woman at the first interview, said during the follow-up that their gender was ''in the making''. I was unable to reach two partners of one female couple, whereas one former female partner of a bisexual woman did not want to participate while also refusing permission to use the 2005 couple interview in the study. This article mainly draws on the bisexual women's follow-up interviews of 2014-2015, while their expartners follow-up interviews and the five couple interviews serve as reference points for my analysis.
I conducted both sets of interviews in five Finnish cities, in the participants' homes or other locations that offered privacy. They were in-depth interviews that lasted between 1 and 4 h. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed using a simplified version of Jefferson's (2004) system. At the time of the couple interviews, the participants were aged 22-42 (32-52 at the follow-up interviews). They were well educated: at the time of the follow-up interviews, eight participants had degrees, and three had vocational qualifications.
I originally recruited the participants through a research request aimed at bisexual women and their partners. Four of the women who responded to the original interview request as bisexual women mostly still used bisexuality as an identity label in follow-up interviews; one woman identified as non-heterosexual, one woman did not label herself. The latter said that she strongly felt that she wanted to share her life with a man. However, she referred to many of her past and present (sexual) experiences as bisexual. Generally, bisexual identification entailed complex negotiations around sexuality and identity labels (see also Lahti 2015;Lahti under review). This highlights the queer theoretical notion that desire and desiring subjects cannot easily be put into clearly defined identity categories that will remain fixed for life (Butler 1991;Giffney 2009).
My study reflects  finding that interviewing couples together and apart generates different kinds of interview talk. The couple interviews of 2005 were semi-structured interviews concentrating on the participants relationships. In the couple interviews, relationship stories drawing on the ideal discourses of enduring relationship and romantic love were dominant: participants aspired to form a durable relationship with one person, possibly for the rest of their lives. One other-sex relationship was described as an agreed open relationship that had never been put into practice. The individual interviews gave more complex picture of participants' (past and current) relationships and highlighted women's bisexual experiences.
By the time of the follow-ups, most participants had separated and found new partners. One couple had stayed married. Two of the bisexual women were now in long-term relationships with men, three were married to men, and one was involved with men and women. Although the criterion for participation in the follow-up interviews was participation in the 2005 interviews, I did not want to set the former interview as the point of departure, preferring to leave it to the participants to judge the significance of that relationship within the entirety of their relational life. I began the follow-up interviews with an open-ended narrative question, adopting a focused version of Wengraf (2001) biographical narrative interview method. As a response to the open-ended question, the interviewees produced rich biographical accounts centred on their romantic and sexual relationships.

Psychosocial analysis utilizing the concept of excess
Particularly in the follow-up interviews with four bisexual women, sexuality and sexual experimentation emerged spontaneously as a central theme. In addition to their relationship histories, the bisexual women gave affective and detailed accounts of their sexual experiences and sexual experimentation. Yet, one bisexual woman did not talk about such experiences. With some exceptions, the sexual experiences were not located in the bisexual women's long-term relationships, but rather at the edges of or between relationships. Although these sexual encounters were often experienced as very pleasurable, the women also expressed concern that they were excessive, ''too much''. Women felt that things had got out of control during these life stages, and they could not fully understand why.
The affectivity of the women's narrations ''haunted'' me, and I felt that I should try to understand why their experiences appeared excessive (Blackman 2015, p. 26). It was the ''hot'' concentration on sexuality, the gratitude, pleasure and affectivity some women attached to their sexual experiences, that had caught my attention. 3 The notion of pleasure alone could not capture the complexity of these experiences (see for example Melzer 2010). The ambivalence through which the sexual experiences were told led me to address the meaning and function of such sexual experiences to the bisexual women-without forgetting their pleasurable aspects.
My discovering of the contemporary psychoanalytic writing on sexual excess (Benjamin and Atlas 2015;Stein 2008) and the different conceptualizations through which Stein (2008) approaches it revealed the women's experiences in a new light. By deploying the various psychoanalytic concepts of excess in my analysis (Benjamin and Atlas 2015;Stein 2008), it became possible to discover the unconscious aspects of women's sexual experiences that could not be reduced to the effects of the norms restraining respectable (bisexual) female sexualities. Especially the ambivalent character of sexual excess, which can easily turn from grace to abomination (Stein 2008, p. 48), resonated with women's experiences.
Yet, how to combine psychoanalytic thought with the understanding of intimate life as socially and discursively patterned? What can a scholar do to bring ''the unthought'' to the representational surface (Clough 2013, p. 176)? While analysing my interview data I followed Sedgwick's (2003) suggestion that the non-representationalexcessive, irrational, unconscious-does not provide access ''beneath, behind and beyond'', but rather is ''parallel with'' and ''beside'' (Koivunen 2010, p. 50;Sedgwick 2003). In my analysis, this meant paying attention both to the interviewee's investments in certain discourses and identity categories (Foucault 1981), as well as taking into account affective and irrational aspects of experience that are not easily put into words (Woodward 2015, p. 82): for example paying attention to affectively intensive moments, to the thickly narrated passages and opacity of the interviewees' talk.
The psychosocial analysis highlighted that the excessiveness of the women's experiences comprised various elements that could not be reduced to either ''psychic'' or ''social'' dimensions. In women's accounts, they were inextricably intertwined. The excessiveness of women's experiences came to the surface through reading of different aspects that came together in women's accounts (Blackman 2015).
Bisexual women's excessive sexual experiences at the edges of or between relationships Now I will analyse bisexual women's accounts of sexual experiences that took place at the edges of or between long-term relationships. These differed from person to person, but there were common factors that could be said to constitute the excessiveness of the experiences. These factors were (1) bisexuality, which as a desire for more than one gender does not fit neatly into cultural understandings of couple relationships and (2) the monogamous norm, which paradoxically assigns special meaning to sexuality that exceeds relationship boundaries. The narration of ''excessive'' sexual experiences was also characterized by more psychoanalytic aspects that manifested as (3) thickness and opacity of the narration, (4) excessive pleasure, (5) excess as an actively pursued shattering of structure, (6) excess as a way of dealing with one's lonely, discontinuous being, and (7) excess that can turn from grace to abomination.

Bisexuality
In the 2005 couple interviews, women's bisexuality tended to disappear in normative relationship talk, in which the interviewees positioned their relationship as a female or as an other-sex relationship, or as a trans relationship, on the basis of their partner's gender (Lahti 2015). The follow-up interviews also revealed that the sense of being bisexual could decline in the course of a long-term relationship. If bisexual women felt sexual attraction to someone whose gender was other than their partner's, they often resorted to homo/hetero and man/woman binaries in order to make sense of their desires (Lahti under review). This paradoxically raised questions about their (bi)sexual identities. This implicated that it was not easy to gain 'a sense of being' as a bisexual person in a relationship (Lahti 2015;Lahti under review).
Cultural divisions affect the status of same-sex and other-sex relationships, and also shape differences in how responsibilities such as household chores and emotion work are shared (Brewster 2016;Umberson et al. 2015). Little wonder, then, that women would ponder whether they should live their lives with a partner of a different gender from their current partner, or that they would want to explore those desires. For example, for Ella (all names are pseudonyms) the open relationship arrangement that she referred to in the follow-up interview as her period of ''sexual exploration'' was at first connected with her wish ''to be with a woman at some point''. The periods when women had sex that exceeded a couple commitment were often connected in some ways with their (precarious) bisexual desire, although this was not the most prominent aspect of these periods.
Casual or non-exclusive sex after a break-up, or during phases when a couple commitment is not fixed, is not somehow more typical of bisexuals. Yet an opportunity to have sexual experiences with people of different genders might have special meaning for bisexual people because of the precariousness of bisexual identity (Hemmings 2002;Sears 2014;Storr 1999). Anna explained: ''I wanted to explore, like what am I, am I bisexual now or what. After the long relationship I wasn't sure any more.'' Sexual experiences with people of different genders could strengthen women's bisexual identities.
Nonetheless, the women were quite hesitant to link their sexual experiences to bisexuality, even if they valued them highly. Negative stereotypes of bisexuality haunted their accounts (Blackman 2015). Anna said: ''[B]ut it's not like I needed to have sex with both genders that otherwise I would feel being somehow in need, it's not like that … I don't feel like that I am that kind of hyper-… hypersexual bisexual.'' In this way, she seemed to balance her otherwise joyful tone in the interview … ''I enjoy my sexuality and I feel like a sexual being''-against the stereotypes that mark bisexual sexuality as hypersexual and thus too much.

Monogamous norm
The phases when women had sex casually or outside a couple commitment required much more explaining than (taken-for-granted) sex in a relationship (see also Farvid and Braun 2013 Conversely, in the couple interviews of 2005, the couples' sex lives were rarely discussed spontaneously. Sexuality was talked about in a casual and distancing manner, as a taken-for-granted part of a couple relationship. Affectivity was attached to only one couple's account of their sex life: the transcouple defended themselves against the cultural construction of non-heteronormative sex as lack (see Lahti 2015, pp. 439-441).
Women's affective accounts of their sexual experiences in the follow-up interviews resembled Finnish sexual autobiographies from the 1990s: ''each writer's current, long-term relationship frequently received little attention, whereas various parallel relationships that had occurred at different stages of the writers' lives were depicted in great detail and with feeling'' (Kontula and Mäkinen 2009, p. 149). Finn (2012) argues that maintaining the monogamous order means constantly fending off the chaotic excess outside it. Western cultures, which stress the importance of monogamous couple relationships and fidelity, paradoxically assign special meaning to sexuality that takes place outside a couple commitment, contributing to the experience of it as excessive (Finn 2012).

Thickness and opacity of the narration
In what follows I will highlight the women's narration of their excessive sexual experiences, which is constituted not only by bisexuality and monogamy-related norms but also by the non-rational psychic dimensions of those experiences. Excessive sexual experiences were often connected to relationship break-ups-the often difficult and painful task of disengaging oneself from an existing attachment and moving towards something new.
Thickness and opacity characterized women's accounts of their experiences ''at the edges''. A long period of time could be narrated in one breath. When women described these periods of life, they were often still puzzled about what had happened and why, many years later. This highlights the excessive nature of sexuality: the ''reasons'' behind a person's actions can remain hidden, from the person herself and from the researcher, although we can try to make sense of them afterwards. This resonates with the notion that sexuality unsettles the fantasy of a sovereign subject (Berlant and Edelman 2014;Butler 1991;Stein 2008), and points to the fact that we often misrecognise our own motives and desires (Berlant and Edelman 2014, p. viii).

Excessive pleasure
Pleasure was often an essential feature of women's sexual experiences during life phases when they could put their sexuality into practice more ''freely'' than in (monogamous) relationships. They described this pleasure in hyperbolic terms. Ella explained: ''[w]ith that woman, first off the sexuality was absolutely, super super wonderful.'' Before these pleasurable experiences the women (and their partners) had often struggled in their relationships in various ways, including sexually. Anna described her long-term relationship with Emma: [W]e were together for ten years, and there were times when we had good sex and times we didn't have sex at all … I stayed faithful but now I regret it … yet I don't think that our relationship failed because the sex had been bad, it was other things … the fights.
This relationship struggle might have added extra pleasure to her new experiences. She expressed gratitude for them: ''I am so happy that I have had these experiences … I have had this enormous luck that I have by chance bumped into these people [of different genders] with whom I have been able to form these kinds of interesting, mutual, different kinds of relationships.'' Women's gratitude for the pleasurable sexual encounters might reveal the scarcity of these kinds of experiences in their personal past or in their cultural expectations, as they were not taken for granted but rather as a sign of enormous luck (Barker and Gill 2012).The phase when Anna was no longer bound to a relationship also provided an opportunity to explore aspects of sexuality that had caused her to feel shame in her former relationship: I have learned to listen to my body in a different way and notice if I want something. Before, I have suppressed that kind of desire. … Or like, I knew I have had that kind of fantasy, but I had never thought … that I'd be in a situation where they can be put [into practice] safely and otherwise that you can tell them to someone without feeling that you should be ashamed. Yeah, there are parts of my sexuality that have been cleansed of shame, because of these new experiences I've had after the break-up.
However, she anticipated an end to these pleasurable encounters: ''I'm not expecting this to go on forever.'' The implication was that it was a bit too much, after all, for a woman to have this much sex with different partners. Usually it was anticipated that the end would come when the women entered new long-term couple relationships. Interviewees would say playfully that monogamy was not the best option in the long run, but most of them nevertheless settled for it, because they felt non-monogamous ways of arranging relationships ''would get too messy'' (Lahti under review).

Excess as an actively pursued shattering of structure
The (internalized) monogamous norm was only one factor that would bring a feeling of ''too-muchness'' to women's non-exclusive sexual experiences. There was often a tumultuous feel to the women' narration of these life periods. Ella describes this phase of her life: [F]or many years we did not really have sex. And in that phase it was already somehow, like I wondered if I was asexual or that I couldn't be bothered … At that point we started to discuss poly-or actually it was me who started to discuss the possibility of poly relationships or polyamory, and I guess it was me who decided that from now on our relationship will be like that. After all, it wasn't like a joint decision at all. It was like my husband just agreed to that … Then I had a relationship with a woman, at the same time as I was with my husband. … After that I moved into this other affair with a man … at the same time as I was with my husband-at that point our relationship [with my husband] started to be really over, and then I stated that I cannot stay in this relationship any more. It was very much my decision that that relationship ended. … And after that I still had that relationship going on for some time with that [other] man … I was so very infatuated with him For him [the husband] it [the break-up] came as a surprise. In a way he was the only person for whom, who experienced it as coming out of the blue. … For him the break-up was really horrible.
Ella's phase of sexual exploration took place within an agreed open relationship, and at first she enjoyed her new sexual experiences. Her repeated statement that this happened while she was with her husband is telling of her awareness of the monogamous norm. The thick narration of the three different relationships, and her repeated statement that they happened partly simultaneously and in quick succession, might also reveal a ''too-muchness'' in a relational sense. She left her marriage, and sometime later she also ended the relationship with the other man.
It also becomes clear in Ella's narration that she had struggled in her marriage. Her thick account resonates with the psychoanalytic notion of excess as the active shattering of a structure in order to enable new (ego) structures to evolve. This shattering might provide an opportunity to move towards more advanced and integrated ego structures. Bersani's (1995, p. 100) reading of Freud interprets sexual excess as ''an aptitude for the defeat of power by pleasure, the human subject's potential for a jouissance in which the subject is momentarily undone''. Although these women's psychic structures are beyond the scope of my research, Bersani's (1995) notion can highlight why ending a relationship often requires some kind of disaster whose creation the person only becomes aware of afterwards.
Ella became only gradually aware that it was she who had ''decided'' that her marriage would be an open relationship, and that her husband just ''agreed to that''.
At the end of the interview, she said with tears in her eyes that she never wanted to hurt anyone like that again. Looking back, she reflected: ''I don't know if we built this, like a kind of fantasy, that he could play this game that we were still together although this other person has all these other things going on as well.'' The excessiveness of that life stage was present in Ella's perplexed account of both of her own and her husband's motives in the situation, although she tried to make sense of them in hindsight.
Excess as way of dealing with our lonely, discontinuous being None of the women experienced the phase of increased sexual activity as solely pleasurable. Krista described her relationship with her girlfriend in the 2005 couple interview as ''the first healthy relationship I've had'', and in the follow-up interview as ''the first time in my life when I felt good. … A kind of happiness and good feeling was present.'' After leaving this 4-year relationship, she entered a tumultuous, even chaotic phase: In a way the year between my ex-girlfriend and my current [male partner] has been the most active regarding sex. Like for a year I had this slave, tried that side and then there was a number of casual-but in way there were like, I have never had, one time only I have been with someone I hooked up with in a bar, had sex with a complete stranger. … So the people who hung around at that time, they were all people I kind of knew. Some were taken, but it was like maybe it was like searching for oneself, searching. One was quite lost with oneself at that time. Just let go, didn't care about anything at all. I could keep my job though ((laughing)) because of my boss I guess. They were like really flexible. At that point I got these terrible panic attacks and all that interfered with work. … Before I woke up to reality ((laughing a little)) like this is not my thing. … There was this workmate who was like a fuck buddy, who was really the only, like one of my only friends, like we were friends and we still are, really good friends. But like then there were others… That was a tough year. Quite educational, like now I know what kind of life is not good for me. That's not the kind of life you'd want.
At this point, her narration thickened, and a whole year of her life was blurted out in almost one breath. On the one hand, she described that year as her most active sexually; on the other hand, she pitted her story against the norms of respectable female sexuality. There is a defensiveness when she says that she is not into one-night stands, and when she obliquely admits that she had sex with people who were in relationships. As if to explain herself, she says ''maybe it was like searching for oneself.'' It appears to have been a turbulent time: her drinking got out of control, she almost lost her job, and she had ''terrible panic attacks''. Despite various sexual encounters, her account of her workmate as ''one of my only friends'' reveals her as quite lonely. For her it was ''a tough year''.
She reflects in retrospect that this phase might have been connected to her breakup: ''Maybe it was … in a way one tried to forget that [the break-up] … I don't know, but it was not that easy for me either.'' This resonates with Bataille's notion of the erotic as way of dealing with our ''discontinuous'' state of loneliness (Stein 2008, p. 55), which can be particularly palpable when one has recently disengaged oneself from an important attachment. This resonates with Laura's account after an especially hard break-up when her partner had cheated on her only a few months after they had married: ''When I was single after Ellen, I had a crush on everybody, I was interested in all … like men. Not like seriously. But I saw every guy as a potential sex partner.'' The excess of crushes and sexual desire for men might have served Laura, when she tried to deal with the tremendous sense of betrayal and hurt, still palpably present in the low, sad tone of Laura's voice, when she talked about the events related to her break-up with Ellen many years ago.
Excess that can turn from grace to abomination Krista closed her account of her tumultuous year with a moral tone: ''That's not the kind of life you'd want.'' However, the meaning of this phase in her life does not reveal itself easily. She also enjoyed her sexual experiences: But I don't, like I don't regret it. For example I visited one couple, and as an experience it was good. In a way I didn't do anything I didn't want to do, but then again, like there was this, we were two women and two men and one of them, or both I guess, were junkies more or less and … you wouldn't even think of using a condom or anything … like you wouldn't take any responsibility for the things you did to yourself.
Here the twofold character of sexual excess, which can easily turn from grace to abomination (Stein 2008, p. 48), is particularly pronounced. Stein (2008, p. 48) remarks that although there are often attempts to separate ''good'' excess, which carries meanings of generosity, grace and freedom, from the ''bad'' excess of licentiousness, abomination and ''sin'', this pendulum quality reveals how excess functions. The pendulum, and the leaning towards the immoderate end of excess, ultimately wore this interviewee out. After a while, she disengaged herself from the people she hung out with during the sexually intensive year and moved to another part of town.

Sexual excess embedded in women's affective sexual and relationship histories
After the life phases when bisexual women had excessive sexual relationships at the edges of or between relationships, they usually returned (or wished to return) to long-term, committed monogamous relationships emphasized in Western societies (Barker and Langdridge 2010;van Hooff 2017). However, my analysis troubles the idea that the (transgressiveness of) bisexual women's sexual and relationship choices could solely be understood through taking positions in monogamous or nonmonogamous relationship discourses. It is not possible to fully understand the meaning of sexually excessive life periods without placing them in the context of women's affective sexual and relationship histories. Excessive sexual experiences can be important in themselves, and can play a propulsive role in women's lives (see Bersani 1995).
When we examine how Krista's life unfolds through different phases, ruptures and (dis)continuities, for example, the affective texture-the ''canvas'' where her intimacies take place-becomes tangible (see Clough 2013, p. 177). Her experiences of crude gendered violence and threat in her first relationship with a man cannot be overlooked as shaping what intimacy means for her. But also, as she says later in the interview, she grew up with an alcoholic mother, ''in an atmosphere where whenever you uttered your own point of view, you would get trashed''. On this affective canvas, the seemingly arbitrary order of Krista's life events-a stable, happy female relationship followed by a sexually tumultuous and even self-destructive phase-has an unconscious logic, reflecting the opacity of the subject, not totally in control of itself (Berlant and Edelman 2014;Stein 2008). Later she started dating a man, which she describes in the follow-up interview as sexually very intense: ''our sex life has functioned very well and right from the beginning, it's been you know, like insane … I don't know anybody else with whom it had been like that.'' And yet the situation is complicated. ''We fight against his alcoholism,'' Krista explains.
These ruptures, continuities and discontinuities highlight how women's biographies are formed by ''psychic life structured by temporality and the history of desires and negations'' (Koivunen 2010, p. 41). Yet women's biographical narratives do not only reflect their singular life histories, but are entangled with the social positions available to women as sexual subjects. It is not a coincidence that within Western gendered (power) relations women had experienced domestic and sexual violence, suffered eating disorders, and neglected their own sexual desires and needs in order to please their partners, and their female relationships had been downplayed and discriminated against. Ella describes how she experienced sexuality when she was young: ''I just wanted to be the right kind of [girl] … please the other.'' Yet for all women who told affective stories about sexual experiences ''at the edges'', sexual pleasure also had a central place in their lives at the time of the follow-up interviews. Ella laughed: ''[W]hat I would like to do mostly is to dance and to have sex ((laughs)) that's like the most important thing.'' Ella's and Anna's depictions of their current sexual experiences were filled with pleasure: [M]y [current] male partner has a very different life history and he's had lots of sex and lots of partners and has had a sexually rich life … I think that it has been a great gift for me to have someone so free and ready to enjoy beside me … our sex has been very very wonderful right from the beginning. (Ella) [I]n one event, we danced and all of a sudden I had this orgasmic, ecstatic feeling that my body is jiggling and wiggling … an intense, strong experience of pleasure about my body which is full of energy and which jiggles. (Ella) [T]he kind of chastity and nervousness of youth is washed away … and now you notice that sexuality is quite fun and it's something you can play with, that you can be quite liberated with it. Like even at the same time when you have sex you can talk about it … that's a new experience for me and also that I have had the courage to try sadomasochistic sex (Anna) Within the normative limits of feminine sexuality, these women have striven (both consciously and unconsciously) to become sexual subjects who find and own their desires (which of course is never fully possible). I have come to think of sexuality's excess not just as a power that might help us to transgress regulatory frames, but as energy that might allow (psychic) change (see Berlant and Edelman 2014, p. viii; Bersani 1995)-not necessarily dramatic or permanent change, but an energy for change that comes about as women's lives unfold.

Conclusions
In this article, I have explored the excessive character of bisexual women's sexual experiences at the edges of or between relationships. My analysis develops the psychosocial concept of excess, highlighting both the discursive regulation that constitutes women's experiences as excessive and the irrational, unconscious psychic dimensions of that excess. The excessiveness of these experiences is constituted by two cultural discursive factors. The first factor is women's bisexuality, which as a desire for more than one gender does not fit neatly into cultural understandings of couple relationships. If a woman feels sexual attraction to someone whose gender is other than her partner's during a relationship, it often paradoxically raises questions about her (bi)sexual identity (Lahti under review). Sexual experiences ''at the edges'' give women an opportunity to explore their sexuality and sexual identities anew. Yet even more prominent was the second factor: the monogamous norm in Western cultures, which stresses the importance of couple relationships and fidelity. Paradoxically it also assigns special meaning to sexuality that takes place outside a couple commitment, contributing to the experience of it as excessive from a moral point of view; a sentiment still applied more harshly to women than men (van Hooff 2017). This was evident in the various explanations the women gave of the life phases during which they had sex with different partners. However, the life phases when women could explore their sexuality beyond a monogamous couple commitment could be experienced as very pleasurable. This was tangible in the affectivity and gratitude with which the bisexual women talked about their sexual experiences. However, the psychosocial analysis of women's sexual experiences highlighted the pendulum quality of sexual excess, which could easily turn from (over)excitement and grace to abomination (Stein 2008). Women could feel that what happened was ''too much'' for them or that things got out of control. There were also other non-rational psychic dimensions of sexual excess present in the women's tumultuous life phases, as the sexual excess often seemed to carry a function of an ''actively'' pursued shattering of structure (Bersani 1995); or a way of dealing with one's lonely, discontinuous being (Bataille 1957(Bataille , 1976cited by Stein 2008, pp. 54-57) after a painful break-up.
After phases of experimental sexual experiences ''at the edges'', the women usually returned (or wished to return) to long-term committed relationships. The nonmonogamous ideas they contemplated in the interviews were often abandoned as unrealizable in the 'real world', reflecting the limited choices available for people living conventional (heterosexual) lives (Lahti under review;Barker and Langdridge 2010;van Hooff 2017). Yet, my analysis opens up a new way of thinking about the transgressiveness of bisexual women's sexual and relationships choices beyond simply taking positions in monogamous or non-monogamous relationship discourses.
My analysis shows that (transgressiveness) of bisexual women's sexual experiences cannot be separated from gendered power relations in Western societies. Women's affective sexual and relationship histories did not only reflect their singular life experiences, but also the social positions available to women as sexual subjects, often meaning limited options to explore sexuality or pleasure on their own terms. For bisexual women, excessive sexual experiences were part of their ongoing identity work and perhaps necessary in order to transgress the deeply intertwined personal, interpersonal and cultural boundaries, which regulate (bisexual) women's sexuality and relationship behaviours. Excessive sexual experiences often played a propulsive role in the women's lives and brought them nearer to what they found sexually pleasurable. Sexual pleasure held a central place in the current couple relationships of all the bisexual women who had told affective stories about sexual experiences ''at the edges''. Sexuality's excess thus has the potential to complicate women's relationship with norms that dictate how they should be sexual.
Inequalities in intimate relationships ' Research Project (project 287983). Her research focuses on how the notion of bisexuality fits into cultural understandings of couple relationships and the affective effects of this. She visited the Morgan Centre for Research into Everyday Lives, the University of Manchester, UK, in 2015, where she wrote the first drafts of this article under the mentorship of Professor Brian Heaphy and Dr. Vanessa May. She has previously published articles in Feminism and Psychology. Lahti is currently finishing her dissertation and plans to start her post-doctoral research project focusing on the separation experiences of LGBTIQ people.
Too much? Excessive sexual experiences…