Emily Quinn: The way we think about biological sex is wrong
Emily Quinn describes herself as "a ballsy intersex activist who uses humor and storytelling to create a more welcoming world for people who don’t fit in a box." Full bio
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as a surprise to some of you.
about my genitalia.
about bravery or courage.
biologically either a man or a woman,
complex than that.
somebody could be intersex.
I was born with XY chromosomes,
as male chromosomes.
and balls inside my body.
or body hair, body oil.
actually have a uterus --
I can't have biological children.
based on their genitalia.
we ask whether it's a boy or a girl,
about having a baby
the genitals you wanted;
tells you anything about that person.
putting people into boxes
with one another.
you also have your chromosomes,
your hormone response
like breast development, body hair, etc.
all have so much variation,
of a single other human trait
that's it, no other options.
for our bodies to look,
that there's that much variety
XX or XY chromosomes,
people with XX or XY,
at the scene of a crime --
but, you know, we'll see.
thousands of years from now,
and has to have her ovaries removed?
who are born without balls or ovaries
or a combination of the two?
to be a woman?
who are born without one.
that's exactly this thick,
at a 90-degree angle,
that's this wide internally
above the vaginal opening
like they're supposed to look like,
you watched that one time.
sexual partner in your lifetime,
just by their genitalia.
are both so ingrained in our society,
into one box or the other,
to make you question it.
I'm the exception, an anomaly, an outlier:
around two percent of the population.
as genetic redheads.
the entire population of Russia.
every culture in history.
that they're intersex.
to determine your chromosomes?
for all of your hormone levels?
last year, in his 50s.
for intersex human rights here in the US,
she wasn't "fully" a woman.
or kept in the dark about our bodies,
to a lot of people.
about sex or bodies at all,
I was fine with that information.
my understanding of the world.
society's expectations of me,
play with the "wrong" toys
about gender norm,
about who they're supposed to be
until we put it on them.
that I would also get cancer
to tell me that every year.
who want me to remove them.
like yourself, has testicles,
becoming cancerous --
of it becoming cancerous.
away from the body to cool off,
they're not producing sperm.
of information about intersex people,
the difference.
I needed to have surgery on my vagina.
until she operated,
"normal sex" with my husband one day.
with the operation,
to tell the difference
unless I told you;
that I was intersex unless I told you.
of understanding about bodies,
the difference.
my sex life is fine.
bring up memories of doctors touching me,
the physical harm
unnecessary surgeries.
from the emotional harm
that tries to cover up your existence.
have had operations like these.
testes like mine,
is lower than the risk of breast cancer
no predisposition, no family history.
to remove her breasts, do we?
that hasn't been operated on.
to improve intersex kids' lives,
doing the opposite,
doctors are bad or evil.
that causes some doctors to "fix"
their definition of normal.
that needs to be enlightened.
puberty guidebook
about their bodies as they grow up.
or their boy bodies --
on the things that our bodies do
a full, luxurious, hipster beard,
a few mustache hairs,
about who they are as men?
respond to testosterone in different ways.
a man ashamed about something like this?
we could live in a society
that our bodies do or do not do.
about biological sex in this society --
the world as round, right?
with mental disorders
by the devil anymore, so that's cool.
the more we understand as a society.
save intersex kids
inadequate or ashamed
you were too girly,
for not fitting into a box,
because it prevents them from seeing
inside our boxes, either.
nobody actually fits in a box,
is something we constructed,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emily Quinn - Artist, activist, authorEmily Quinn describes herself as "a ballsy intersex activist who uses humor and storytelling to create a more welcoming world for people who don’t fit in a box."
Why you should listen
At age 10, Emily Quinn learned she was intersex. As she writes: "Doctors said not to tell anyone, poking and prodding at me like I was a science experiment. It was lonely, shameful, and I had nowhere to turn. I needed someone to tell me that it would be OK, but no one was there.
"Fourteen years later, I discovered an intersex support group, meeting hundreds of intersex people who endured trauma like mine. I knew it had to stop. I was working at Cartoon Network and decided to help create the first intersex main character on television: Lauren on MTV's 'Faking It.' I publicly came out as intersex alongside her debut, and suddenly I was bombarded with interviews, appearing in content across the web. The impact was so great that I quit my job, created a YouTube channel, began speaking globally about intersex experiences, and am now writing a YA novel. In ways I could have never imagined, I became the person I needed as a kid -- showing myself that one day it would be OK."
Emily Quinn | Speaker | TED.com