Lindsay Lohan does not feel she is bisexual despite having been in a long term relationship with a woman.

Lohan granted an interview to Piers Morgan recently, taped before she entered court ordered rehab on May 2. During the Q&A, Lohan set the record straight about her sexuality. She did not think she was bisexual when asked by Morgan to identify herself as such.

"Not really. I like being in a relationship with a guy," Lohan said. "But there's something just different about it with a woman."

Lohan dated DJ Samantha Ronson for almost two years. They began dating in 2008 and their relationship was marked by many highs and lows such as accusations of cheating. Before Lohan began dating Ronson she had only been publicly associated with men.

Lohan told Morgan that her relationship with Ronson was born out of loneliness.

"I didn't want to leave, because I didn't want to be alone. It was very toxic," Lohan said. "And her family controlled anything she did."

The Mean Girls actress said she loved Ronson as a person and that at one point, she was in love with the celebrity DJ. However, she made it clear that she was a straight woman who was simply experimenting with her sexuality.

"I have made out with girls before, and I had a relationship with a girl," Lohan said.  "But I think I needed to experience that and I think I was looking for something different."

In February of 2013, Ronson gave her own take on the relationship. She said she began having panic attacks because of her romance with the actress, blaming photographers who would harass her because of Lohan.

"I had panic attacks all the time. I lost so much weight had such much anxiety, it just made it whack," she said.

Ronson said that the paparrazi never cared about her before and that they didn't start to follow her around until she began dating Lohan. She had become a target by association.

"I would go in and out of clubs - even the paparazzi would laugh - they would see me for years outside the same clubs, smoking cigarettes, talking s**t, and they're like 'I'm so sorry' ... [but] this is what [the media wants]," she said.