A Single Word: Stop!
by Deborah E. Brown, Director
Intersex Support Group International
If there were only one word I could give to parents of a child born with
ambiguous genitalia (intersexual, hermaphrodite, Androgen Insensitivity
Syndrome, et al), that word would be: Stop! Repeat after me, ''STOP!''
When the doctors say, "Your child could never function as a
male/female, so we suggest that we cut..." Say ''STOP!''
When an expert surgeon is brought in to tell you that your child has
malformed genitals, that she/he needs adjustment, and now is the best time to
do it. Say ''STOP!''
You have allowed genetic tests, which have come in with extra chromosomes or
with a pattern that does not concur with external appearances. Say ''STOP!''
As much as every parent wants to bring home a girl, or a boy, your child may
not be distinctly either. Often immediate corrective procedures are necessary
for the life of the child. When well meaning clinicians attempt to make a
package deal, say ''STOP!''
Early invasive treatments literally change the destiny, the identity, the
'me' of your child. It is OK to wait. Gender assignment (mutilation) is NOT
COSMETIC SURGERY! It is OK to wait and see who the 'me' your child turns out to
be, and then bring your child into the decision loop.
If your child is born absolutely mud-ugly, you would love your child, and
you would see the wondrous beauty God has created in them. Even more important,
you don't have to call your baby 'son' or 'girl'. Love your 'dear one'. Hug
your 'precious child'. Enjoy their unique life. As their 'me' begins to be
revealed, that is the starting point for mainstreaming toward a gender
identity, if any. Depending on the diagnosis, that procedure could begin under
4 years old, or later.
It is our belief at I.S.G.I. that a certain degree of social conformity will
eventually need to occur. We believe that God's creation of sexuality is a
special gift, and the distinctive of 'male' and 'female' are part of His
design. Those of us, your children, who don't exactly fit the mold will be held
accountable before God for our lives. Do not rush to decisions for which your
child will forever bear the consequences.
You may ask, "What if we make a mistake? What if we have chosen
wrongly?" I was raised as a male, though my 'me' was female. The decision
to 'adjust' my gender was not made well. My parents labeled my 'me' as odd,
perverse, and as sin. They have missed out on a wonderful woman, Who's Who of
American Women, a mom to three quality kids. Because they 'sat their minds in
concrete' they refused to believe such a person as I could exist.
If you made early decisions to treat/not-treat which your child has voiced
as wrong, don't let your pride add to the wall of mistakes. Accept your child,
love your child, try to identify how your child is expressing their 'me'. Enjoy
the marvelous gift of your 'unique' child, a child designed and built by God.
top | faq for
parents
home
~ about me
~ intersexuality
faq ~ intersexuality vocabulary
~ articles
real people ~
bulletin board
~
|