Pink Talks

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Intersex

Individuals born with any sex characteristics that cannot be clearly categorized as ‘male’ or ‘female’, including chromosomes, gonads, sex hormones, or genitals. These differences might be revealed at birth, and later in life, or some intersex people might never find out about them.

This condition, termed intersex, complicates sex assignment at birth, challenging the binary view of male/female, with boundaries shaped by society rather than nature. Limited intersex awareness stems from historical concealment, causing induced shame that open discussions aim to reduce.

The traditional treatment of intersex individuals, exemplified by the “optimum gender of rearing” system from the 1950s, involved early gender assignment through surgery, accompanied by unethical practices like lying to patients. This approach, lacking a scientific basis, caused psychological and physical harm, treating girls and boys differently with arbitrary genital anatomy standards.

Criticized for its flaws, there is a growing emphasis on ethical, evidence-based approaches for intersex individuals, including advocacy, legal recognition, and education about intersex issues.

Still, intersex people, face unique challenges from societal stigma to medical interventions without consent. Intersexuality is a biological condition, not a gender identity, emphasizing the importance of respecting bodily autonomy, informed consent in medical interventions, and the need for broader societal understanding and acceptance.

(Author: Inga Schmidt)


See more resources

Dictionary. Intersex. Retrieved 30th November, 2023 https://dictionary.apa.org/intersex

INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO TRAINING MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE PROVIDERS FOR THE QUALITY SUPPORT OF LGBTQI+ PEOPLE. Handbook for trainers. Háttér Society (2020). Retrieved 30th November, 2023 https://en.hatter.hu/sites/default/files/dokumentum/kiadvany/common-point-handbook-for-trainers.pdf

Intersex Society of North America. Retrieved 30th November, 2023 https://isna.org/faq/concealment/