Disordering the lives of
children
By Curtis
E. Hinkle
We are no
longer hermaphrodites. We are no longer
intersexed. We are all men and women
with disorders of sex development according to many of the medical experts who
have managed our lives over the past decades.
We now have a new Consortium for the Management of Disorders of Sex
Development and they are proposing to manage the lives of future children born
with this disorder. What are the risks
involved with this change in terminology?
I think there are many.
Is intersexuality normal?
No. However, it is totally natural
and not life threatening in most cases.
There are so many different phenomena in our natural world that are not
normal. Our world is filled with people
who are not normal in one way or another.
However, what criteria do we use to judge whether these natural
phenomena are disorders or not? What
criteria do we use to determine if a natural variation in the human population
is good, bad or neutral? I don’t have
the answer to these questions because there seems to be no precise answer. It varies with the person making the
judgments. I feel that there are two
main questions to ask before judging behaviors, variations and other phenomena
in the natural world. Are they harmful
to society and if so why? Do they pose a
serious risk to the individual and if so why?
If the reason for the risk to the individual is simply society’s
reaction to the issue and not any real threat to that society, then is it the
individual who should be deemed disordered or the reactions of those judging
the individual? I think that it would be
most likely that the problem is within the one judging the individual, not the
individual being judged.
Now that
the managers of disorders are ready to start treating children with these
disorders of sex development, I have a few questions about how this pejorative
terminology will actually be explained to the child and the consequences of
such pathological views that will be used to explain not only the physical sex
of the child but the implications this will have on all aspects of the child’s
life associated with sex, those being their gender identity, gender role,
sexual orientation and actual health needs.
Once a
parent is told that their child has a disorder, they most likely will assume
there must be some treatment to either cure or manage this disorder. The consortium is not holding out a cure
because this is not something that can be cured or needs to be cured in my
opinion. However, they will become managers
along with the parents. Are they
becoming managers just of the child’s body which is the initial reason for the
diagnosis? No, they are becoming
managers of all aspects related to sex in the child’s life, their gender and
their orientation. What starts out as a
physical disorder to be managed is now viewed as a possible psychological
problem with other disorders that could become evident if the child does not
comply with the gender imposed and also we have the undercurrent of
homophobia. Some of these managers may
inform the parent that their child is more likely to be homosexual as a result
of the disorder which could make a lot of parents think that the homosexuality
is also a disorder, part of the original diagnosis when told their child has a
disorder of sex development.
There are
many people who do believe that homosexuality is a disorder and they are
involved in research to prove it. They
may not use the word “disorder” at this time but when links are made with
intersexed children, it would be much easier to introduce this concept of
homosexuality being a disorder also.
Once you decide that certain variations of sex development are
disorders, then most behaviors closely connected with
that group could be viewed as part of that disorder.
When would
a manager of the child’s disorder reveal to the patient that they had a
disorder of sex development? How could
this be done in such a way that the child does not feel that puberty, identity
and other essential aspects of their lives would not be disordered also? I don’t think there is. The very term “disorder” implies that
compliance with the protocols will be essential not to be disordered, not to
have a disorderly life and that the managers are the only ones who have the
solution. But they are not living in the
body of the child. They are not living
in the mind and heart of the child.
Children do not have the words or the experience to understand sex,
gender and orientation.
When
speaking with children, one needs to keep it simple. This is why I like Dr. Hazel Beh’s and Dr.
Every
feeling the child has could be internalized as part of the disorder and
something else that needs management and which is shameful. Not feeling like other boys or girls, not
looking like other boys or girls and not having a sexual orientation that is
like most other boys or girls could be and most likely will be interpreted by
the child as part of their original diagnosis, part of their disorder of sex
development. .
Welcoming
children into our lives is a wonderful gift for many of us. Watching them grow and holding out a helping
hand not only enriches our lives but builds character and strong bonds which
overall helps society as a whole. Let’s give
intersexed children the assistance they need to live in a world that does not
understand them and make sure we do not simply manage them and further damage
them with pathological, pejorative terms which make them not only feel
different but defective and defective in one of the most essential parts of
what our society has deemed all people must be to be fully human – their sex.