genderqueerdykes:

being cisgender is just not an option for a lot of intersex people.

i was never given the option to be cisgender anything. every part of me that deviated from what a girl or boy “should” look like spelled trouble. because i dressed and acted very masculine, before puberty, people called me a bulldyke, a butch lesbian, a “girl pretending to be a boy” and “not a real boy”. i was never “feminine enough” to be a woman.

after puberty hit, i started growing a beard, and my shoulders and chest got broader and more square. my body became more “masculine”, so suddenly, i was labeled as a “boy pretending to be a girl” and “not a real girl”. after I started testosterone, i haven’t stopped being called a faggot, a fairy, a sissy or a pansy because i’m not “masculine enough” to be a man despite being a bear.

there’s no winning in the eyes of a society that’s so focused on binary this-or-that choices. i had no hand in the matter, this all happened way before I started testosterone HRT. in fact, even when i was placed on estrogen HRT to try to “correct” my intersex traits and symptoms, i still wasn’t gendered or seen as a cis woman. i was still the same tranny bulldyke. no matter what i do, my intersex and transsexual traits will always be weaponized against me; whatever sounds the “worst” at the time, or whatever invalidates what i want.

in order to liberate trans people from this struggle, we must also liberate intersex people, for our struggles are virtually one in the same. our fight for body and identity autonomy is shared. it will always be impossible for me and other intersex people to be viewed as cis anything while white American society remains focused on pointing out the “differences” between men and women, instead of embracing the similarities we all can and do have.

intersex and trans people owe it to one another to disassemble these dangerous attitudes and shut them down when and where possible. it’s not only trans people who face this struggle- intersex people deal with never being able to pass or be clocked as their actual gender from birth a lot of the time. people MUST understand that women and men come in all types of bodies, shapes and sexes, whether or not they chose to look like that. and whether or not they chose doesn’t matter, they deserve to be treated with dignity and respect, which means being gendered correctly despite how they look or sound.