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Memories of an Intersexed Person

Is Altering Intersex Babies Bodies Right?

Intersex True-Hermaphrodite

Applied Kinesiology & Holistic Medicine

Use Reiki to Deal with Fear

Observations on Reiki

7 Steps To Better Mental Health

What Is It Like to Be Intersexual?

Here's what's happening on the HealthyPlace site this week:

Being Intersexual

South African runner Caster Semenya should be on top of the world. Instead she is on a suicide watch. At the international track and field championships in Berlin in September, she set a world record in the 800 meters and became a national hero. Now her life is in ruins.

After being forced to submit to all kinds of medical and psychological tests, the 18-year old track star was humiliated when the test results, showing her as being "intersex," were released to the public. Semenya has internal testes and no womb or ovaries.

She's not alone. Over 1 in 1600 births are classified as intersex (what some refer to as hermaphrodite).  Many more have gene variations affecting sexual and reproductive organs as well as hormone levels.

As most everyone with a mental health condition can relate, being different does not usually equate to a good thing. It seems the same holds true for many intersexuals, as you'll see on this Tuesday's HealthyPlace TV Show (more below).

Share Your Mental Health Experiences

Share your experiences, or respond to other people's audio posts, by calling our toll-free number (1-888-883-8045).

You can listen to what other people are saying by clicking on the gray title bars inside the widgets located on the "Sharing Your Mental Health Experiences" homepage, the HealthyPlace homepage, and the HealthyPlace Support Network homepage.

If you have any questions, write us at: info AT healthyplace.com

"What Is It Like to Be Intersexual?" On HealthyPlace TV

How she was treated by doctors and her family growing up was horrible, says our guest, Kailana. At 22 though, receiving the intersex diagnosis from the military destroyed her life. Take a look inside at what it's like to be intersexual on Tuesday's HealthyPlace Mental Health TV Show.

Join us Tuesday, November 17, at 5:30p PT, 7:30 CST, 8:30 EST or catch it on-demand. The show airs live on our website. Kailana will be taking your questions during the live show.

In the second half of the show, you get to ask HealthyPlace.com Medical Director, Dr. Harry Croft, your personal mental health questions.

Still to Come in November-December on the HealthyPlace Mental Health TV Show

  • Mental Illness in the Family
  • Overeating: The Emotional Pain and How to Cope with It
  • OCD: Scrupulosity

If you would like to be a guest on the show or share you personal story in writing or via video, please write us at: producer AT healthyplace.com

Click here for a list of previous HealthyPlace Mental Health TV Shows.

back to: HealthyPlace.com Mental-Health Newsletter Index

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2009, November 16). What Is It Like to Be Intersexual?, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/other-info/mental-health-newsletter/being-intersexual

Last Updated: January 14, 2014

Intersexuality and What Being Intersexual Means

Posted on:

In 1993, Kailana received an official diagnosis of intersexual. She says the diagnosis pretty much destroyed what little life I had held onto. Watch this video.

I don't pretend to understand what it's like to be intersexual. Most of the autobiographical stories, written by intersexuals, that I've read online talk about years of living with pain, shame, confusion, embarrassment and depression. (Read Dr. Croft's blog post: What is Intersexuality?)

For those not familiar with the term intersexual, the Intersex Society of North America defines it as:

"a general term used for a variety of conditions in which a person is born with a reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn’t seem to fit the typical definitions of female or male. For example, a person might be born appearing to be female on the outside, but having mostly male-typical anatomy on the inside. Or a person may be born with genitals that seem to be in-between the usual male and female types—for example, a girl may be born with a noticeably large clitoris, or lacking a vaginal opening, or a boy may be born with a notably small penis, or with a scrotum that is divided so that it has formed more like labia. Or a person may be born with mosaic genetics, so that some of her cells have XX chromosomes and some of them have XY."

A vast majority of the time, doctors make a decision as to what sexual identity the child will have. Some intersexuals undergo surgery to “normalize” genital appearance. Other parents of an intersex child are told, raise your baby as a "boy" or "girl."

Your Baby is an Intersexual

As a parent, it's a traumatic experience and confusing to say the least and most are not prepared in any way for the birth of an intersexed child. Thus they rely on the doctor's advice...and from what I've read, it varies widely, from doctor-to-doctor.

For the intersexed child, there are years of doctors visits, not understanding your condition, feeling disconnected from your body, knowing that you are not like everyone else of your gender and the shame of living with that, being socially isolated, plus feeling your parent's feelings about you being an intersexual.

Kailana, Intersexed, Endured a Lot for Little Gain

Kailana is 39 years old.

"When I first realized I was different is a very hard question to answer mostly because my early medical life as a young kid was confusing. Too many doctors appointments out of town and out of state that I look back on and only remember crappy memories. Too many physical examinations and odd comments and questions.

I ended up with a life as a kid and teen only being confused about what I was because doctors and parents kept asking me one question over and over, "are you happy as a boy?"

"The answer was simple, I am not a boy and apparently no one understood what those few words meant. I ended up being ignored and while I looked like a boy, sort of, I did not feel it."

In 1993, Kailana received an official diagnosis of "intersexual." She says "the diagnosis pretty much destroyed what little life I had held onto."

We'll be discussing the various psychological and emotional aspects of "being intersexual" (read Kailana's blog post - Intersexual: Raised the Wrong Sex) plus a common question that spans all of mental health: How do you deal with a trauma or traumatic event that is beyond your control? Watch the video on intersexuality.

Share Your Experiences on Intersexuality

We also invite you to share your experience - whether as an intersexual, a parent or loved one, or a medical professional. Leave your comments below.