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Claiming Intersex Sexuality
©James Costich, December,
2002.
Reprinted with permission of the author.
My
journey out of shame, fear, self-loathing, and sexual dysfunction
started with the eraser at the end of my pencil. I started by erasing “shoulds”.
There were far too many of them stuck on me to do it alone. I had the help
of an excellent sex therapist from within the GLBTI Community. I also had
the help of a loving partner, (9 years), who helped me have the sexual
experiences
I needed to build a healthy sexuality, joining me in the adventure and cheering
me on. Part of my finding and claiming my gender and sexuality as gay and
intersexed helped him find and claim his gender and sexuality as a gay
and male. That
road had bumps!
I
was sexually crippled by the word "should". Men should
be male, should have penises and testicles, shouldn't have any female organs
at all,
should have masculine personalities, shouldn’t be like women but should
be heterosexual. Should, should, should, the list is huge. My body, mind, and
personality didn't fit all the "shoulds" and had plenty of "shouldn't's".
No matter how hard I tried to remake myself into the fantasy of what a man
should be, the reality of my own existence persevered. Stop. Go back. Look
at that statement closer. If you are intersexed, intergendered, transgendered,
transsexual, or any gender/sex variant person that’s what you are. You’re
not the malformation of male/masculine/heterosexual or female/feminine/heterosexual.
Our truth doesn’t lie in being something else, it lies in being exactly
what we are, and in learning that it’s a good thing to be what we are.
Without
the "shoulds" in my way I could finally look at myself
in a mirror. My partner and I took out a mirror, looked at, explored, and
talked
about my genitals. I stopped imagining my body as what it "should" have
been and started living in it as it is. My partner experienced this change
as a barrier being lifted, he finally felt free to touch me. I always thought
that people held back from touching or being oral with me because I was malformed.
The truth was that they felt my guard go up and it made me unapproachable.
My fear of rejection, not the shape of my genitals, caused me to be rejected.
By finally exploring my body, I discovered I had anatomy I had never known
about. That’s an item for another story. When I gave myself permission
to like my body I could invite other people to enjoy it too. How could I have
been so trapped in thinking that a man with a vagina is a freak, a woman with
a penis is an abomination? Suddenly it was so easy to be me, and I hadn’t
done anything except tell myself, and others that I am what I am and what I
am isn’t quite male or female, is both and neither. For the first time,
I was just me. Just intersexed.
It took a lot of positive sexual experiences for
me to finally let go of my old image of myself as deformed, and let people
show me that
exotic, (I’m
not hideous, I’m exotic!), is exciting. We invited friends to have sex
with us and no one kicked me out of bed. We joined a gay men’s naturist
club and no one gasped when I took my pants off. I started getting lots of
attention wandering around “clothing optional” gay men’s
camps because my friends knew about me and could brag about my sexual prowess
as well as call me a good friend. The more positive experiences I had the better
I felt about my body and myself. Several times I’ve found myself the
center of attention at sex parties (safe, sane, sober and among friends). I’ve
learned that men with a bi-sexual quotient are most attracted to me. I’ve
learned that cock size really doesn’t matter, no matter how much men
brag. I’ve learned that being intersexed makes my experiences and perspectives
on sex, love and intimacy different in ways that are valuable to me, and others.
I’ve learned that what everyone wants more than anything else is to be
held, and everyone longs for love. I’m envied for my partnership, and
other men have told my partner he’s the lucky one. I’ve even
learned that there are lots of anatomically male men who are more self-conscious
and
inhibited than I was.
My final frontier is to be with other gender/sex variant people. Isolation
is still my heaviest burden. I have lots of adventures and stories to share,
and plenty more to live. Come join the feast, no need to wait. We can set our
own place at the table.
Reprinted with permission
of the author. Originally published in The
Empty Closet, a publication of the Gay
Alliance of the Genesee Valley, NY
Read more from Jim Costich.
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