Being born intersex means your body doesn’t fit the typical patterns of “male” or “female.” For many, that’s meant others — doctors, parents, systems — deciding who you were supposed to be. Sometimes through surgery, sometimes through silence. It can leave a deep sense that your body was never truly yours.
But your body isn’t a mistake. It’s evidence of human variation. You can reclaim it, step by step. Start by looking at it on your own terms — not as something to fix, but as a story you get to rewrite.
If anger, grief, or shame appear, they make sense. They’re responses to having been defined by others. Healing isn’t about forgetting — it’s about meaning: “This is my body now. I choose what it means.”
Alma’s tips:
• Seek healthcare or community spaces with intersex knowledge — you deserve respect, not curiosity.
• If you can, write your body’s story in your own words. It’s an act of freedom.
• Your body doesn’t need to make sense to others to be real to you.
You are not an exception. You are part of humanity in its full, beautiful range.
