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Apr/16/2009 

I Refuse

We are more than what people normally expect of us

Andre · 1131 views · 41 comments
Categories: Thoughts, Intersex Issues

Jan/25/2009 

The Fading Warrior

The dimming light of memory in a Alzheimer's parent

Andre · 1416 views · 85 comments
Categories: Thoughts

Oct/28/2008 

The One

Everyone is important

Andre · 1322 views · 60 comments
Categories: Thoughts

Sep/08/2008 

10 Misconceptions about Intersex

Ten Misconceptions about Intersex
By Curtis E. Hinkle
Founder, Organisation Intersex International


1. Intersex means that a person has both sets of genitalia.

This is probably one of the most common misconceptions about intersex. Intersex usually has nothing to do with the genitalia of the person, much less having two sets. There are intersex people with a penis anda vaginal opening. However, there are no documented cases of a person being born with fully developed male and female genitalia. The vast majority of intersex people have genitalia that look pretty typically male or female with a small minority having atypical genitalia. As a matter of fact, the quaint, pseudoscientific term “true hermaphrodite” can refer to a person with totally typical male or female genitalia.

2. 1 in 2000 infants is born intersex.

This is one of the most common statistics given. It would be more accurate to state simply that in hospitals with gender assignment teams, 1 in 2000 infants is born with genitalia that are so atypical that the attending physician requests the help of the specialists in the team to assign a sex. Most hospitals in the world have no gender assignment teams and most intersex people have typical genitalia. One should be careful to note that even in the majority of births with
atypical genitalia, the doctor does not request any assistance from a gender assignment team even if one is available. Therefore, one can readily see that this figure gives the impression that intersex is very, very rare. It isn’t. There are so many different ways of being intersexed that it is very hard to give a statistic at this time. A more accurate estimate is given by Sharon Preves who has researched the topic of intersex very thoroughly. According to Preves, “The frequency could be as high as four percent.”

3. Intersex is about homosexuality.

The underlying reasons for pathologizing intersex and suggesting treatments which are often barbaric most likely are a result of homophobia. However, there is nothing about intersex per se that would cause one to state that intersex and homosexuality are the same issue or that they are directly related. There quite possibly are links but the physiological reasons are not fully understood at this time.

What is important to understand is that many intersexed people do identify as gay or lesbian. At the same time, many intersex adults find the whole issue of homosexuality irrelevant to their perception of themselves. More and more intersex people are comfortable with an intersex gender identity which they feel is more accurate in describing how they perceive themselves. The socially constructed model of eroticism offered up by many cultures which divides people into homosexual and heterosexual erases their identity. Even bisexuality which has been reluctantly accepted further perpetuates the idea of only two genders by the use of the prefix “bi” which means “both.” Actual experience has led me to realize that there are people who are primarily attracted to androgynous people, to “masculine” women or “feminine” men. And most important of all, what is theopposite sex of an intersex person who clearly states they have an intersex identity?

4. Intersex is not about gender.

To many intersex people, gender is the main issue. In many countries around the world, there are no early surgeries to “treat” intersex bodies. These people’s main issues are often based on not being able to fit into either gender or growing up with a body incompatible with the gender in which they were raised.  The very theories used to support mutilating intersex bodies both surgically and hormonally are based on notions of gender which have been proved to be unreliable. According to the theories often espoused by followers of Dr. John Money, gender is merely the result of social
factors. We have very reliable proof that this is not true. Many other factors are involved that are not simply social. The individual is the best source for determining their identity – not someone looking at them from the outside.

Intersex is not just about our bodies but also about how we perceive ourselves within those bodies and gender identity is a crucial part of everyone’s identity. To erase the importance of gender to the individual intersex person is to reduce that person to only the physical aspects of their body, neglecting the more important part of the equation, their own perception of that body and themselves, as opposed to how other’s perceive them.

5. Intersex is part of the transgender movement.

No. Whereas individuals who are intersexed might identify as transgender, the opposite is not true. Most people who are part of the transgender movement are not intersexed. To include intersex under the umbrella term “transgender,” overlooks our specific needs which often are medical reform, legal issues concerning which gender we are, health issues specific to intersexed bodies and more importantly, the fact that most intersexed people are not trans. Many are perfectly happy with being men or women and more and more of us are quite happy being simply intersex and find the notion of trans totally foreign to our identity because we are rejecting binary gender categories altogether and the prefix “trans,” just like the prefix “bi” mentioned earlier, keeps the binary well intact.

6. Only true hermaphrodites are real hermaphrodites.

This is as silly as saying there are true males and pseudomales. The whole idea of dividing intersexed people into true hermaphrodites and pseudohermaphrodites is just another desperate attempt to keep the arbitrary binary gender categories intact. According to this pseudoscientific terminology, only people with gonadal tissue of both
“official” sexes are hermaphrodites. Choosing only testicles and ovaries as the indicator of one’s true sex has been
totally dismissed by modern science. There are women born with no ovaries, men born with no testicles and their true sex as they perceive it is often clearly that of a man or a woman.

7. Transsexualism is not an intersex condition.

We don’t know. The definition for Transsexualism can lead one to think so because it is so intricately bound to the diagnosis of Gender Dysphoria that one is left with the impression that it is a mental disorder. The fact that many infants born intersexed reject their sex assigned at birth would cause a reasonable person to wonder if in fact all cases of Transsexualism are simply a mental phenomenon. Is the intersexed person merely delusional about their true sex?
Should they just try harder and get over the “Gender Dysphoria?” I find it more likely that the medical personnel are the ones that are delusional in thinking that they can determine what sex an intersexed infant is without asking first. The Organisation Intersex International maintains that all persons born intersexed should have the right to speak for themselves and this includes those who were assigned the wrong sex. To view us through the lens of Gender Dysphoria
simply silences us once again, making our problem a mental one and not a societal one. The delusion and mental pathology are in the society at large which feels the need to determine one’s true sex based on genitals and to stigmatize individuals who do not fit into neatly packaged gender stereotypes.

8. The intersex movement is an identity movement like other GLBT movements.

No. The Organisation Intersex International campaigns for full Human Rights for all people born intersexed and one of those rights should be the right to selfidentify. The intersex movement should include us all whether we identify as a man, woman or simply intersex, and regardless of sexual orientation.

9. Most intersex people were assigned female.

From personal experience, I have not found this to be the case. Many intersexed infants assigned male are often overlooked and the parents are simply told there is some work necessary for proper urination or that a testicle has not descended, etc. When one reads about all the various ways of being intersexed, one realizes that an intersex person is just as likely to be assigned male as female.

10. Intersexuality is a condition which can be cured.

Intersex people have health problems just like everyone else. Mutilating our bodies is not a cure. It is simply barbaric. Being a male or a female is not in and of itself a health problem but there are health problems specific to females and males. This is also true of people born intersexed. To view intersex as a condition which can be cured only further justifies the barbaric medical practices we are often subjected to, such as mutilating surgeries, hormones which may be contrary to our own core identity and psychological treatments for not wishing to comply with the barbaric treatments. Intersex rights are Human Rights and all people born with an intersex condition should have all the rights granted all other people. This is the mission of the Organisation Intersex International.

Andre · 1224 views · 13 comments
Categories: Intersex Issues

Aug/23/2008 

Humanity's true colours



Only Pink and Blue?
Humanity's true colours
By André Lorek
Founder of GendersInX
Board member of OII-Canada
© 2008

Even before a human being is born, they are put into categories relegating them to a set of colours determined by a standardized, but arbitrary, system. It is not anyone in particular who makes this decision. It is the system which determines the category.

As a foetus, we are scanned to check out if we are doing well and yes, whether we are male or female so that we can clothe our dearest in the announced colour. The sex is of the foetus is announced as if it is only in passing or some additional information that the tests reveal. The tests were performed because we really want to have healthy children, vibrantly reflecting all the tones of the world.

As we come out of our self-centeredness normally attributed to childhood, we find that the world is really a hurtful place. We adhere to our parents in the hopes that they will protect us from all the evil that exists for it is during our childhood that we learn about good and evil, about feeling good and feeling bad, pleasure and pain….in essence the wonderful things and the dreadful things. Later we start to grasp colours, that most things are in between the white and the black. We find ourselves being relegated to a certain colour, a pink or a blue, despite whether we feel we were rightfully labelled.

From infancy on, we are taught to see the emotional world through colours such as a cowardly yellow, a depressed blue, an enraged red, a sickly or jealous green and a haughty purple. Later we refine ourselves and emotional hues come out of these like lilac or tan and we find ourselves re-evaluating the world which we felt as a limitation. Another world of emotions appears within us where there are no set standards and this frees us to discover them for ourselves within our own experience.

As far as outward looks are concerned, we have a nice variety of tones. Hues of white, dark brown, black, pink, yellow and red all combine to form what we call humanity. The intermixing of these tones of skin and emotions are the embodiment of a vast variety of cultures and ethnicities, each giving us well rounded characteristics. Living in a metropolis of all these colours gives a person a glimpse of what would be if all this would be accepted, of how rich we would be.

Colours emotionally move us, rule us, direct us and box us in. But they can give us freedom and allow us to express ourselves, our identifies and what sustains us and challenges us at the same time. We are under the colour of a territory, of a country and of the world as a whole. Each different country has a painted flag that includes a tone for the representation of the people and of the land. Every four years, the multicoloured Olympic Rings represent all the people in a sport and the entire event celebrates colours of every hue except for those individuals not in the pink nor the blue.

Yes, the representations of blue and pink are the only colours allowed and this is a good measure of how far humanity has come. All that we are taught from childhood on stops when organisations made up of differently coloured people both internally and emotionally decide what colours are acceptable.

Here, we the children of the world, learn a new  word to which comes the ugliest of colours: discrimination.

Out of all the vibrant tones of civilisation, it is hard to accept that this is a representation of humanity's true colours. How can pink and blue possibly represent all the colours of humanity?

It is time that the all genders and all ethnicities be honoured and treated with the same dignity and it's time that intersex people be considered part of the human family.

Our time has come.
Andre · 973 views · 55 comments
Categories: Intersex Issues

Aug/23/2008 

Lost

Somewhere between you and me, there is a place we can call home.

Andre · 1351 views · 45 comments
Categories: Thoughts

Jul/10/2008 

Times Past

The passing of a friendship

Andre · 1217 views · 33 comments

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