[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com
Does anyone here know if there is a term in use within the intersex community (or beyond), to refer to those who are not intersex? Something that does the same job for them as cissexual for trans people, heterosexual for gay people, or neurotypical for autistic people?
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[identity profile] auntysarah.livejournal.com
This was originally posted in my own LJ, so apologies for it not being entirely community-specific, but I thought it worth posting here.

The issue of whether South African runner, Caster Semenya, is to be allowed to compete as a woman, whether she'll "pass" various "gender tests", and so on continues to rumble on in the media. I'm finding it very distressing, and can't imagine how awful Ms Semenya must feel right now, facing the destruction of her career and humiliation by the international media because she might "not be female enough".
cut for length )
[identity profile] meclamta-eda.livejournal.com
Okay...

So I have an inquiry for advise, which I'm hoping some folks reading this who are intersexed, or are educated in intersexed issues, or who are actual medical practitioners, regarding myself relating to the medical community.

My situation, boiled down to the basics, is that I am listed as being born male, eventually came out as m2f, and began engaging western medicine to obtain transition over ten years ago.

I recently discovered, over the course of time, that I actually believe that I am/was intersexed in the first place, making me both trans and intersexed. Largely, what keyed me off to this overlooked detail, was my period starting.

"Huh. No wonder the other boys at school didn't know what I was talking about when I described an occasional stabbing pain in my lower abdomen. Huh. Makes sense, I suppose they didn't have uteri to experience that with. Funny that."
Read more... )
[identity profile] elusive-dreamer.livejournal.com
Hello, I am new to this community and have a question to ask.

My best friend has congenital adrenal hyperplasia and was thinking of laser surgery not to long ago to treat the male-pattern hair that grows on her face. She has heard from some people that with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, laser surgery is most likely not going to keep the hair from growing back. As a last attempt for her, I was wondering if anyone here has used laser surgery and if it has worked, or if any other method has kept facial hair from regrowing back.

Thank you for your time; any info is much appreciated.
[identity profile] samanthak0805.livejournal.com
I had a 3+ hour debate with my friend the other night.  The topic was research on transgenderism that may or may not indicate a physiological "cause" and whether it would be more positive or negative for the trans* community.  If not familiar with a theoretical (and currently the popular) thought, please check out the section "So what causes people to be Trans?" at the following URL:  http://www.t-vox.org/index.php?title=Trans_101  (It's about half-way down the page - but I think the entire page is an excellent read)

The question, then, is:  If they find the cause to be related to some genetic marker which they can map and identify and/or to some "shower" of androgens or other hormonal chemicals in utero which they can accurately time and measure, will the overall effect of this breakthrough be positive, validating our "condition" to institutions that have resisted acknowledgment?  For the most part, would we finally get coverage for SRS and other procedures from medical insurance companies?  Would we gain consideration for government legislation that no longer includes the religious (and "moral") argument against it?

Or, would the effect be largely negative?  After all, with identified genetic markers and/or hormonal shower timeframes and chemicals, the potential to create a "cure" would then exist.  If such a "cure" was found and could be implemented in utero or childhood to a trans* individual under parental direction, does this not have serious and frightening negative connotations, virtually eliminating our community by removing the right of control of the individual's body and feelings?

My friend argued the latter and felt the potential negative results should cause concern enough to consider whether the positives may be worth the risk the negatives present.  I argued the former and that the positives could exist without the negatives.  I further argued that what she was proposing was an extreme violation of human rights.  I could not imagine that in this day of rights awareness and activism there would not be such an uproar as to prevent these catastrophic violations.

Of course, we both agree wholeheartedly that we do not have a disease that requires curing.  We have a condition (with a newly discovered physical basis, in my scenario) that requires a certain individualized regimen of therapy, HRT, and/or surgery to allow us to exist as both trans* and the gender we wish to be.  I don't believe either of us is right or wrong and we probably do agree with the other in many points.  It was simply a debate to stir thought.

Does anybody have any thoughts or agreement with either of our positions?  Is there information I'm unaware of that may invalidate the entire debate, or even "spin" the debate in general in another direction? 
[identity profile] jenaflynn.livejournal.com
Anyone ever had this done? (To detect possible intersex conditions?) I've flipped back on forth on this for a few years now, and I've had more than one doctor say that I should get one done.

If you'd had it done... How'd they do it? (Blood, or cheek swap, or a biopsy?) Did it hurt? How long for the results to get back? What was the cost if your insurance covered, what was the cost if it didn't, and if your insurance covered it, what did they classify it on the bill as, to get them to pay? :) And what were your results, etc?

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