 It was one of those messages I get occasionally, this time from a man  who had suddenly realized we were just a few blocks away from each  other. The writer's father was at a nearby Northwestern hospital,  suffering from a terminal cancer.
It was one of those messages I get occasionally, this time from a man  who had suddenly realized we were just a few blocks away from each  other. The writer's father was at a nearby Northwestern hospital,  suffering from a terminal cancer."While trying to pass some time I went to ISNA's Web site  only to discover that it was no more. [The Intersex Society of North  America] basically saved my life. Wonderful people such as yourself, Cheryl Chase, Anne Fausto-Sterling,  etc., have no idea how much of a difference [you made] and how many  lives you have deeply affected. THANK YOU! It would be an honor meet you  and shake your hand."
I offered to meet the next morning at the  local tea place. And then I started wondering, as I often do with these  out-of-the-blue communiqués, if this message was a fake. Was I being set  up?
Jim's message made me suspicious because he was obviously a man and  yet he said that he was a survivor of androgen insensitivity syndrome.
And among those with partial AIS  (pAIS), men who had obvious ambiguity at birth but who escaped sex  change in infancy are really rare; for more than 50 years, most doctors  have recommended that XY babies with pAIS and ambiguity be  "reconstructed" genitally as girls. Surgeons alter their genitalia to  look more female-typical, and take their testes out. Starting at  puberty, these children are given estrogen treatments. I knew of a  couple of guys with pAIS who had been raised as girls and had become men  as adults, but they were rare. Rarer still were those raised as boys.
But  the minute I saw Jim, I knew he was real. I knew he was real because he  started crying, and couldn't talk. It was a reaction I'd seen before  among people with disorders of sex development (DSD) who had been too  closeted to meet another person with their condition, but who could get  up the gumption to ask to meet me. I served as a way out of the closet,  and so I represented the first human they came upon when they opened the  door. I always tried, in my reaction, to signal simply, "Yes, you are a  fellow human, and I am glad you are here." I always have trouble not  crying myself.
I gave Jim a hug, and waited for him to be ready  to talk. He began by telling me again that I had saved his life with my  work. I said what I always say: "It has been my privilege." Which is to  say: Well, duh, honey, who wouldn't save your life if she could?
Over  the course of the next hour, Jim told me his story. (I relay it with  his permission.) He was born with ambiguous genitalia - with hypospadias  (where the opening of the urethra is on the underside of the penis),  with a smaller-than-average penis, and a herniated testicle. Against  doctors' advice, his parents raised him as a boy. The docs of course had  recommended sex reassignment, as was standard. His parents did not  resist because they were radical; they resisted because they were  terrified and young and I'll bet they didn't understand why you would  take a baby with testicles and make him a girl.
But back then,  doctors believed, per the psychologist John Money of Johns Hopkins, that  a boy such as Jim couldn't grow up to be a "real" boy - straight,  tough, and manly. Money believed doctors could more "successfully" make  such children into girls, a process that in Jim's case would have  involved castration, removal of penile tissue, surgical construction of  more female-looking genitalia, and a lifetime of lies.
Jim did  get the lies, and then some. As a child, besides hernial repair, he had  been subjected to hypospadias surgery as well as some penile  "reconstruction." He told me the surgeries went okay, all things  considered. The surgeon had not been overly ambitious. (I'm not sure I  expressed to him just how lucky he was.) At puberty, without telling him  his diagnosis or medical history, they shot him up with testosterone -  trying to make him manlier - leading to unwanted breast growth. (High  levels of testosterone can convert to estrogen.) Jim then had surgical  breast reduction.
Still they didn't tell him what was going on.  He just knew he was different, and that he was supposed to be ashamed.  Jim told me that he hadn't gone to college out of fear that someone  might find out he was different genitally. This is the reasoning some  surgeons still use for "surgical reconstruction" of genitalia - fear of  someone being found out to be sexually atypical - but it doesn't occur  to these surgeons that the problem isn't the atypical genitals, it's the  shame and bullying. I told Jim, "Your genitals weren't the problem that  kept you from college; the shame and the locker rooms were the  problem." He nodded.
As an adult, Jim had one of his testes out,  arising from a medical concern. This reduced his natural level of sex  hormones, and he started struggling with depression. I don't think this  is a coincidence; I've heard from enough people who have had depression  after testicle removal that I think there is some association between  sudden drop in testosterone and depression. Unfortunately doctors can't  study this well in the DSD population, because historically they have  been too ashamed to talk honestly with their patients about DSD.
Jim  told me about going to a urologist for follow-up care, only to hear the  urologist say to the nurse, outside the door, "I don't deal with this  shit." I told Jim I had heard similar stories from other people with DSD  - of one woman who heard the nurse say, "The hermaphrodite is in Room  2," of another who read her chart upside down and thought it said,  "Patient has not been told she has AIDS" when, she learned much later  that it actually said, "Patient has not been told she has AIS." I told  Jim I knew that this kind of treatment of people as medical monsters was  worse than any surgery could ever be. "Soul-crushing" was the term I  offered. He agreed.
Eventually Jim had gone and got his own  medical records, to find out what had really happened to him. He uttered  a sentence I must have heard 10 times from 10 different people by now:  "I went out in the parking lot and started reading." In Jim's case, he  discovered he had pAIS and that his parents had resisted sex  reassignment. All alone, he read the diagnosis of "male  pseudo-hermaphrodite." It was like being kicked in the gut. Although he  had not been personally treated by Money, he felt clear that he had  suffered the abuse of Money's messed up approach to sex anomalies.
Now  50 years old, Jim has found a terrific adult endocrinologist, a woman  who isn't a specialist in DSD, but who gets that if she has a patient  who needs her to learn about his DSD. She put him on a supplement to  replace the testosterone he lost from the removal of his testicle.  Almost immediately he started feeling better - more energetic physically  and emotionally.
Jim has been married for many years to a woman  with whom he's raised a child. I could tell from his tone how much he  loves his wife and daughter. He observed to me, "If I'd been raised a  girl, I guess I'd be a lesbian, and that'd be okay, though it's more  difficult I guess, with our culture." He told me about how happy he and  his wife were when "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" was repealed.
Jim  confessed to me he had had insomnia the night before - what with his  father hospitalized - and so he'd been up much of the night reading my  Web site. He said that he knew, from my Web site, that some people had objected  to the move from talking about "intersex" to talking about "disorders  of sex development." But, he said, "I love the new term, DSD." He said  it captured his experience - that what he has is a medical condition. He  doesn't have double sex, or double gender, as people seem to think when  they hear the term "intersex." He has a DSD.
I asked Jim if I  could write up his story. I told him I wanted people to understand what  we tried to impress upon people through our work at the Intersex  Society, what I've tried to impress through so much of my work: that the  biggest issue is not surgery, nor hormonal treatments, nor even the  criminal lack of psychological support for families like his. That the  biggest issue is shame, and how no one deals with it in a way that lets  people like Jim and his parents know there is nothing for them to be  ashamed of.
When I got back to my office, I wrote to two other  Jims to ask them to talk to the newest Jim in my life. One Jim I was  writing to also has pAIS. He'd been raised a girl, and had become a man a  few years ago. The other Jim had hypospadias, and had been through a  gazillion "corrective" surgeries, out of the concern that he should pee  standing up, like a "real" man.
It is no exaggeration to say I  find myself adoring all three Jims. I fantasize someday the three Jims  will all meet, and share an utterly shameless hug.
A postscript:  While Jim and I were e-mailing back and forth after meeting, just after I  finished a draft of this, Jim sent a note:
"Dad passed away at 9  last night. We're at peace. Sad, but at peace. His final gift to me was  the strange turn of events that allowed me to meet you. Although we  never spoke of my condition, he always introduced me as, 'This is my boy  and no one could ask for a better son.'"