Intersex (for lack of a better word).
Hall, David S.
Intersex (for lack of a better word)
By Thea Hillman
Manic D Press, 2008, 155 pages, $11.21 on Amazon
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
As a sexuality educator, I have some familiarity with the world of
Intersex people. I have loved them, cried with them, rejoiced with them,
mourned their death, and heard many of their deepest stories. When I
read this book, my heart cried, and I learned a lot more than my text
books tell me about gender identity.
I probably met Thea Hillman in San Francisco in the early
90's, we seem to have attended a few of the same events, but I have
no specific recollection of her. Now I feel I know her well. She bares
her soul in the many chapters of this (sort of) diary. She speaks of her
experiences as a young child, being diagnosed with Congenital Adrenal
Hyperplasia, and what that experience meant to a four year old girl who
was growing pubic hairs, a child who was poked and examined by many
doctors, and had a total lack of personal privacy of her body. She comes
back to this experience many times in the stories she tells of her life
as a person who does not really know what gender she is. She speaks
about her "outwardly simple though visually misleading, internally
complicated gender." She speaks of her mother's prayers that
she would be normal. She speaks of normal this way:
"I take the war on terror personally because the war on terror
is really a war on difference, because my body strikes terror in the
hearts of other Americans.
"My body and the bodies of the people I love are the most
intimate sites of American imperialism. Because our sex anatomy
isn't normal, they operate on us without our consent. Because who
we have sex with isn't normal, they won't let us get married.
Because our gender isn't normal, they don't give us jobs,
health care, or housing. We work, we pay rent, we pay taxes, but because
we're not normal, we don't get the same freedoms other
Americans enjoy, the same freedoms American soldiers are murdering to
protect.
"Normal is a weapon of mass destruction. It's just as
deadly, and just like those weapons, it'll never be found"
Thea has served on the Board of Mills College and as the Board
Chair of the Intersex Society of North America and been a spokesperson
for the Intersex community, yet she says:
"When it comes to talking about trans and queer community,
there are a whole bunch of things I can't say. In fact, it's
much easier to think about what I can't say than what I want to
say. Things I can't say because I will piss someone off: no
generalizations, of course, about anything, but specifically, and most
dangerously, no generalizations about transmen, transwomen, butches,
femmes, genderqueers, or intersex people.
"I fear that regardless of the fact that I've been
hormonally altered since age six in order to achieve and maintain a
mythical gender ideal, I can't safely talk about my concerns about
hormones and surgery in our community for fear of being seen as
anti-trans and anti-surgery"
Thankfully, she manages to cover all these areas in her many short
chapters, mostly from a very intensely personal perspective, using the
"I" voice. She talks frankly and specifically about sex, her
feelings and her behavior. She speaks of lovers and hot partners and
really interesting parties, but all from the perspective of one who does
not clearly know what she/he is all about internally. The gender
identity confusion comes through in many ways. She is also able to share
with us some of the experiences of people in her life. We become, if we
choose, one of her intimate friends.
This is the book for anyone who is interested in Intersex as an
educational or therapeutic topic, is gender curious, is gender confused
or just likes to see what a talented writer can do with such a personal
subject. The far right calls her a radical who promotes the
"homosexual revolution." I call her courageous.