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Self
One might ask,
"What is atypical genitalia?",
If
you were born with a body that was neither clearly male or female,
or have a child born like this, you may already have a sense of
the issues facing people like us. It is obvious to point out that
we are each unique, and that there is no "normal" when it comes
to the way our bodies are created. Indeed we all deviate from the
"norm" in some way or another, and we generally celebrate those
differences. Bodies Like Ours hopes to positively change the way
we think about ourselves, and the way society and the medical community
view us.
As expectant parents awaiting the birth of a baby, we face 9
months of uncertainty as to the health of our child. Amniocentesis
has done much to allay our fears, but one aspect is certain we think:
Our child will be born either a girl or a boy. In one out of
two thousand births ~ more often that cystic fibrosis or
spina bifida ~ outward genital appearance may not give a clear
indication
as to whether a newborn is female or male. Most parents, hardly
aware of this common occurrence, find themselves in a place where
the joyous news of "It's a boy!" or "It's a girl!" cannot be
shared until further evaluation of their newborn is completed.
Sometimes,
agonizing days or weeks may pass before definitive tests are complete.
How can it be that most people have never even heard about this
condition until they are faced with it in their own lives?
Since the 1950's, the still-current medical protocol has directed
physicians to keep important information about this condition
from
parents and patients alike. It is believed by many that parents
will have difficulties bonding with a child that was formed
uniquely,
and
that a parent's acceptance of of their child as a boy or a girl
depends on the outward appearance of their child's genitals.
Giving
little faith to a parent's ability, some surgeons believe that
this bonding will only be complete if genital surgeries are
performed
early in a child's life.
Girls born with larger than acceptable
clitorises are surgically "normalized" by either having the
clitorises surgically altered. Boys with
small penises often meet
a similar fate and arereassigned female. While total clitorectomies
are rarely performed today, there are still some surgeons
that see
this as a solution--giving little regard to how this surgery
will affect a child as she grows into adulthood.
Most importantly,
physicians
have encouraged secrecy for the child; sheltering them from
information and explanations. Parents were instructed to remain
vague
and to
simply encourage gender appropriate behavior. Inadvertently
we are shamed into secrecy. Striving for normalcy we continue
to isolate
ourselves. We stopped asking questions that never seemed to
get
answered to our satisfaction.. We stopped voicing
doubts
about our different bodies, because we were told that we had
been "corrected": "normalized" to the satisfaction of society's
standards.
Our self imposed exile has made it nearly impossible for surgeons,
pediatricians and psychologists to provide accurate follow up
studies.
Even when contacted, we are reluctant to share our views, or we
lie: we lie, telling the easy answers and the ones that won't
lead to getting
us cut more. Instead we give answers we think they want to hear.
Often we have diminished our feelings or suppressed them completely.
For
many reasons, people like us with bodies like ours are finally
finding our voices.
In our short lives as activists in this arena we have made many
important discoveries:
- People
with bodies like ours have too few resources available to
help them answer questions often too personal to share with
even their closest confidants
- Professionals
in the medical field are having tremendous difficulty understanding
people with bodies like ours because we have remained so isolated.
We
are not just "a body" however; we are
human beings with souls, feelings, and aspirations.
As
you begin your exploration of your "self" and the
"selfs" of those who know and love, we hope you will explore
some of the basic parts of our being:
- Our
Gender It
is who we are.
- Our
Sex It
makes us sensual and loving human beings.
- Our Bodies While
not our defining aspect, it is what got us here in the
first place.
- Our
Stories What we feel, and what we know.
- Queer
Bodies A site for teens and young people.
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