Archive for September, 2009

Finding an Old Flame on Facebook. A Users Guide.

Monday, September 14th, 2009

imagesFound Your First Love on Facebook? Great if you’re both single. Dangerous if one of you is married.

In the last few weeks, three married friends have confided to me that they have searched for, and found, their first love on Facebook. In my small world this number represents a huge trend, so I’m going out on a limb to guess that this is going on all over the country. I am backed up by a recent article on Time.com that quotes other people who are doing it and who don’t live in my neighborhood. So, it’s real. But, why is this happening? And how dangerous is it?

The “why” is pretty simple for me to understand. Our first love affair, whether it was consummated or not, was an enormous emotional event. Those powerful memories of young love and sexual arousal stick for life, so the opportunity to revisit those feelings is pretty darn seductive. Add to that the fact that the largest growing group on Facebook is made up of users aged 35-54. While their college aged counterparts used social networking  to find people in other classes, older Facebookers, use it to find people in other parts of their memory banks. Case in point, although I grew up in several cities in Canada and now live in Los Angeles, I am hosting a cocktail party this week for Facebook friends from my elementary, high-school, and college years. Some live here now and some are flying in. None of them know each other. I am the only connection. I’ll let you know how that one goes.

As for the finding the “first love” trend, there’s even a name for it. The Boston Phoenix calls it “retrosexuals”, meaning people who are opting for recycled love. This is all well and good, if both parties are single. The media is full of stories about divorced people taking a second stab at love with their first fling, but what if there are marriages and vows involved? Oh, yah, that. How dangerous can an innocent email exchange be?

Hugely dangerous. The problem starts when you first hit that “friend request” button. You have betrayed your spouse and are now entering the uncharted waters of an emotional affair. I mean, you’re not looking up the geek from eleventh grade who got you through algebra. You’re looking up the hot guy or gal you once lost sleep over. There is an emotional connection with maybe even some sexual memories attached.

The next problem is what to do when he or she answers your cyber call. Do you start an emailed, intimate foray into your emotional world? Do you look for ways to meet? What about if you keep it boundaried and chat lightly about your family and his/hers? Still dangerous, people. Take the example of a married woman who has found her former homecoming king. Even if she and her husband went so far as to invite he and his wife over for drinks, there’s still an affair if the unsuspecting husband doesn’t know the full value of his wife’s feelings for the man he’s handing a beer to.

Besides putting yourself (and your marriage) in the path of a potential affair, looking up an old flame isn’t always as rosy as the anecdotes in today’s media. All humans change across the lifespan, physically, intellectually and emotionally. You are two very different people now. The likelihood that sparks will fly in your condo as well as they did behind the bleachers, is pretty small. Relationships tend to be time and place sensitive.

So, with all that said, I will now disclose that the only reason I can sit up on this soapbox is because my first love, Carl Brittain, isn’t on Facebook. I know, because I already tried to find him.

Fire up that flame, ladies and gentlemen, at your own risk. Just be prepared to give some business to therapists and divorce attorneys.


What Does Celebrity Love Say About Us?

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

From MomLogic.comThe headlines strike us first: Reality TV star, Kim Kardashian and her boyfriend of two years, New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush, are going their separate ways… Pop star LeAnn Rimes and husband Dean Sheremet have announced that they are splitting up after news of an alleged affair between Rimes and former co-star Eddie Cibrian…Limp Bizkit frontman, Fred Durst, Weds in Vegas…Kelis Receives Big Child Support Check from Nas…Dallas Cowboys quarter back, Tony Romo breaks up with pop star Jessica Simpson.

The love lives of celebrities are the cash cow for most popular media. The biggest click-throughs on even hard news sites like The New York Times are often celebrity love. Why do celebrity relationships titillate us? Most of don’t have lives that involve an entourage who leaks, press who churn gossip, paparazzi who ambush, and much time spent in private airports hiding behind very large sunglasses. So comparing celebrity relationships with ours might seem fruitless, and even a bit grandiose. I mean, when was the last time we worried that our husband might be seduced by Paris Hilton at a Hollywood Club?

Could it be that we are just as voyeuristic as the journalists who collect the dish for us? Are our lives so boring that beautiful, wealthy people are our main source of entertainment?

The answers to those questions are more complicated than a straight yes or no. There certainly is a great deal of entertainment value in watching Godly beauty struggle and morph into human tissue. But I maintain that our lives are not so dissimilar. Most adult Americans experience intense love, great heartbreak, regretful angry outbursts, and moments of loneliness. We are the fortunate ones who don’t have to read about it on CNN.com with our morning coffee, nor see a bad photo of ourselves beside the article. (For the record, whenever I blog about celebrities, I tend to choose the most flattering photo I can find, even if the mainstream press has pinned them a villain. It just seems like the most humane thing to do.)

We may not have the drama of a media spotlight, but we can certainly sympathize with a celebrities’ relationship problems. People gossip in the real world too. Partners have affairs with co-workers not unlike any on-set romance. Divorce is just as ugly when the child support payment is less than a star’s monthly shoe expenditure. And we sometimes wear dark sunglasses when picking up our kids from school because we can’t find the strength to let our “in crowd” see our pain.

Celebrity news makes our pain feel, somehow, normal. Our very real human emotion of empathy helps us have a shared emotional experience when we witness a celebrity’s love life. Suddenly we are not alone in our own journey. And we are comforted by the knowledge that money and fame do not protect us from relationship problems. And it is that emotional experience that keeps us hooked on entertainment news. The habit isn’t dangerous, unless we find ourselves silently rooting for tears and humiliation, or if we hear a voice calling us sit outside the gates of their mansion. :)

But for the most part, we empathize and understand that their problems are much like ours. So, when Kim and Reggie part ways, we can think of the long distance relationship that failed for us. When Jessica gets dumped the day before her birthday, we remember the jock in high school who bailed before the prom. We get it. We’ve been there ladies. We’re in there with you.


Is Marriage Becoming Extinct?

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

From MomLogic.comThe shape of our families is changing. People are marrying for the first time later in life, and the divorce rate is soaring, giving way to many single parent households. Single life is no longer a short rite of passage; it’s an important consumer demographic. For the first time in history (since the immigration of mostly male, early settlers), almost half of adult Americans are now unmarried. There’s even a magazine devoted to the lifestyles of those who have made a commitment to be single. It includes ads for commitment rings to purchase for oneself.

But has love changed? Has committed love been replaced by a revolving door of dates? Is long-term monogamy even necessary for our species’ survival? The answers are complicated. Marriage may be changing, but it will never go out of style.  In case you’ve been living under a rock, there’s a fight going on right now in America to allow more people to be granted marital rights.

Marriage may not be going away, but its purpose has shifted. Historically, marriage was a place for women and children to have economic protection. It was a place where religious values could be taught and extended to the next generation, and a place where family fortunes could remain intact. More recently, marriage became a place for a relatively new invention: romantic love. But since dating and hooking up have morphed into America’s favorite pastime, full of hopeful highs and disappointing lows, even romantic love is losing its luster.

So why choose marriage today? Because it is an intellectual decision that leads to survival of the species. Anthropologists have always said that it was human’s sophisticated social structures, including the adoption of long-term monogamy, that help our species procreate and thrive.

Humans are the animals that require a huge amount of nurturing for our psychological and physical survival, more than virtually any other animal on earth. While most newborns are up on four legs and running with the herd just hours after birth, we Homo sapiens have a vulnerable in-arms (or stroller) phase that lasts almost four years. And it’s really, really hard to nurse and carry a baby while extracting resources from the environment. Just ask any single mother. Doable, yes, but very difficult. Remember the mission: to grow up healthy and create offspring that are also healthy and ready for careers and parenthood.

Family therapists know that dysfunctional family systems eventually fall out of evolution’s chain. Each generation has fewer and fewer offspring that survive through the next procreation, until the family line finally dies off. Apparently, neglectful parenting can create drunk drivers, criminals caught in crossfire, hermits, drug addicts, and narcissists too selfish for parenting — all people with lower chances of reproducing. But let me make one thing clear before I get inundated with e-mails about this: I am IN NO WAY SAYING that all single mothers create dysfunctional families. What I am saying is that every time one factor is removed from a system that has been selected through evolution, the chances for dysfunction increase. Plenty of single mothers are raising healthy kids with the help of extended family, surrogate male role models, and friendship villages that act as a de facto family. And this is part of our changing family structure.

Evolution has shown that our best chances for survival and for the survival of our offspring’s offspring is a team approach to raising humans. And the best team captains are people who have a biological interest in the child. And to create that, we need to sometimes put the notion of romantic love aside and make an intellectual decision to do what’s best for our genes, ahem, I mean kids.

The Art of Forgiveness

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

From MomLogic.comThere’s no way around it, when someone has wronged us, it hurts. It often hurts a lot for a very long time. The injury could be minor, though profound, like a betrayal by a friend, or it could be major, like a physical assault. The point of the saying is that, no matter the injury, we can’t truly move on until we learn to forgive. And that’s a very tough walk. Here are a few thoughts on the art of forgiveness and how we can all learn to cultivate it.

First of all, think of forgiveness as a gift to yourself, not a gift to your offender. When a deep injury is done to us, we’ll never recover until we forgive. It is a way to clear a blockage in our minds and move forward with new knowledge and new growth. We are a more evolved person after we forgive, and that’s our gift to ourselves.

Forgiveness requires empathy. It is essential that you begin the forgiveness process by putting yourself in the shoes of your offender. Imagine that pain and fear are behind his or her anger. Imagine a small child inside your enemy who is as confused as you are about the injury. Imagine what it must feel like to walk with the guilt of having hurt someone. It doesn’t matter if your offender will ever actually get to the conscious place of feeling guilt and remorse. He or she need not seek your forgiveness in order for you to have a transformation. This process is about you. But it is helpful to come up with some explanation for your offender’s heinous action that feels rational to you. This is your mental journey. So, whether you imagine their bad childhood, their feelings of racial or gender persecution, or their feelings of envy toward you, find a reason for their bad behavior.

Now, from that place of understanding, make a conscious decision to forgive that person. Create a private action that supports your decision. Write an unsent letter to them, light a candle and say a prayer in their name, or simply stick a post-it on your bathroom mirror that says “I forgive (insert name) I have feelings of love for (insert name).” This is a secret act but it’s a powerful action for brain change. For a few weeks, return daily to these private actions of forgiveness. Reread that letter. Relight that candle. Say the words on the post-it out loud. This is a way to rewire your brain.

The biggest step toward forgiveness is to express it to your offender. Whether you do it in an email (easiest) on the phone or in person (best, if possible) it must be done so that you can move on. And the tricky part of forgiveness is this: to express forgiveness without expressing blame. Your words should focus on your own feelings of hurt rather than the act that caused the injury. So, instead of saying, “I forgive you for stealing from me, you jerk,” you might say something like, “I felt so betrayed when I lost that money. But now I am letting go of those feelings. I want the best for you.” This is your journey and this higher level communication will speak to the highest level of your offender’s personality.

And, be reminded that forgiveness in not a magic trick to change someone else. Even if you change, the other person may not. And that’s okay. And finally, know that forgiveness takes maintenance. During future life stresses, old feelings about this injury may bubble up again. Each time they do, quietly walk those feelings back to bed with the same techniques. Eventually enough time will pass that those memories will lose their emotional punch. Forgiveness is the most mentally freeing experience. I encourage you to try it.

Caster Semenya: Feeling Life With Two Genders

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

Runner Caster Semenya

Caster Semenya, the 18 year old South African runner who took the medal for the women’s world 800m last month, has now declined to race in an upcoming event even though a decision has not been made about whether to take back her medals. In one of the biggest gender scandals in international sports, unconfirmed reports say that Caster’s body contains pieces of both genders. She has no womb or ovaries, and although her testosterone levels are higher than most women, she is still within the bounds of regulations for female athletes.

The most important piece of this for me is that Caster Semenya self identifies as a woman and has been aculturated through feminine roles. Gender is, in part, biological and in a big way, psychological. Imagine her struggle growing up in a world that puts people into two neatly stacked piles called male and female, and feeling like she doesn’t quite fit into either? Plus, she’s an 18-year-old! Teenagers at this age are struggling with identity issues anyway as they individuate from their families and peers. Imagine the humiliation of having the entire world study your genitalia at this vulnerable stage of development! No wonder, this poor girl has dropped out of another race.

Many in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, and endocrinology have long acknowledged that human beings may fall into a third gender category: that is, a catch-all group of people whose gender is not clearly defined based on chromosomes, external genitalia, and gender identity. Human cells contain 22 pairs of matched autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes. A classic female has two X chromosomes, and a male has an X and a Y. However, over 70 different variations of the sex chromosomes have been identified, and prenatal hormonal processes can be affected as well. The point of this article is not to give you a biology lesson nor speculate on the chromosomal makeup of Caster Semenya. Rather, it is to pose the question of whether it makes continued sense to lump all people into two neatly stacked categories of gender.

Historically, when a newborn was born with ambiguous genitalia, the parents were often asked to make a choice and the child endured a series of painful “cosmetic” procedures. These days, there’s a movement, mostly led by fetally androgenized females (those born with a vagina and a bonus, a structure that looks more male than female) to educate parents and discourage them from mutilating their precious bundle of joy until after puberty when gender is more set, and children can have a say in things.

And gender isn’t only biological. No matter what our chromosomes and genitalia indicate, gender identity is an individual matter. Some people feel more like a man.  Others more like a woman. And some feel somewhere in the middle. It’s also important to separate this discussion from sexual orientation — being gay, straight, or bisexual can happen with any chromosomal combination. In terms of sex and gender identity, we are one multifaceted world.

I say, if Caster Semenya’s testosterone levels (the hormone that affects athletic prowess) are within the boundaries of a female athlete, then let the lady run. Since she has no womb. Those medals are her babies. It will be very interesting to see which other female athletes get tested next.

Athletes & Violence: A Message to Professional Sports Organizations

Friday, September 11th, 2009

San Diego Chargers linebacker Shawne Merriman was arrested early Sunday on suspicion of choking and restraining MTV reality show star Tila Tequila, police said. That’s according to CNN.com this week.

There are little details on the incident, but clearly an arrest was made. Is this another case of a man with enormous talent and potential unable to stop his physical self when emotions are involved? In many ways, it’s not so surprising for athletes. They spend decades of their lives being urged to use aggression to get what they want — in Merriman’s case, a Super Bowl ring — so why are we surprised that physical action is the go-to place when they get in a regressed state? I happen to know a man who was sentenced to a year of court-ordered domestic violence group therapy and he reported to me that it was like going to an NBA/NFL fan club meeting. There were many appearances by professional athletes in the court-ordered group.

So, what can parents and coaches of amateur and professional athletes do to help these young boys and men learn alternative ways to express emotions? At the very least, some skills in emotional communication should be taught alongside physical education. Already the NBA offers a course in sexuality to protect its rookies from arrest for rape or from an unwanted pregnancy. I think it’s time that these organizations step up and get these brave and talented men the emotional education and communication tools they need to keep themselves out of jail for domestic violence. Don’t you agree?

Good Fights? Bad Fights? What Kills A Relationship?

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Ever been in a passionate argument with your spouse and had the thought, “This is it. This will divorce us for sure?” Here’s a secret: Most people have those thoughts in the heat of an angry exchange, because in the regressed mental state called rage, “water under the bridge” doesn’t seem like an option.

Conflict is a natural part of having an intimate relationship. As couples come back to each other after a fight, in a place of love with words of contrition and forgiveness, the relationship is often stronger for it. It is at least more intimate. The bumpy road of conflict followed by repair is the route to a deeper connection. Now we know our partner’s hot buttons very well. And hopefully he knows our tender spots too.

But how can you tell if your fights are “good fights,” the kind that will eventually help you grow closer, or “bad fights”, the kind that chip away at your bond and erode your love? Some kinds of fights do function as a slow kill on your relationship.

There are some things to consider: First of all, think about the power of the words used during a fight. Yes, even though psychotherapists stress that we must use words that focus on our feelings rather than accusations, even the most educated of us resort to blaming sentences that begin with the word “YOU!” That alone doesn’t indicate a “bad fight” unless it is also followed by vicious name calling. Name calling is a bad sign. It indicates that one partner has temporarily forgotten the other’s identity and has substituted it by a skewed stereotype. It’s hard to drop those evil caricatures once our minds have created them. If you see him as a loser and tell him over and over, you are also rewiring your brain to believe this is true.

One other thing to consider is the amount of voice time alloted each arguer. If the yelling is terribly lop-sided and one partner gets more air time, then something else is going on. Either intimidation by the loud mouth, or an emotional retreat by the other. Both things are not fighting fair.

As injurious as a fight can be, the biggest determinant of whether it is a “good fight” is the way repair is made afterward. There are many unique ways that couples come back into relationship after a fight. Notes left by the morning coffee pot, flowers at the office, and my favorite — off-the-charts make-up sex. But the important thing to remember is that love and respect can return.

Dangerous aftermaths include icy treatment for days on end. Little jabs thrown into unrelated conversations. Passive aggressive, retaliatory behavior. And worst of all, a fight that morphs into other fights that get flooded with material from old injuries. “Remember the time you…..”

The best way to learn to have “good fights” is to establish ground rules before any fighting begins. Men love rules of the game. It reminds them of sports and makes fighting a healthy challenge rather than a confusing battle with a scary, invisible opponent. Some ground rules might include, no name calling, no stonewalling, no fighting in front of the kids, no going to bed mad, and most importantly, scheduled make-up time the next day. It is also important to understand that each person has their own fighting style that must be respected. A man who walks out the door for brisk walk during an argument may not be rejecting you, he may be protecting you from a shift from words to action. Some people need a time-out to regroup and think during a fight. The time to talk about fighting styles, of course, is when you are not fighting.

Arguments with someone we are deeply committed to can be very, very scary. And the outcome of a fight may not be what we bargained for, but two individual people sharing a life will have many opportunities to compromise. Remember, it’s not who wins the match that matters, it’s how the game is played. Reminding yourself that love can return is the best way to insure that you have good fights.


Please Forward to New Moms: From Princess to Queen — How New Mothers Psychologically Transform

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Long before I had children, I had a love for all the world’s children and actively worked with a local children’s charity. During one of our heated planning meetings, I noticed that there were two camps within our board of directors — women who did not have children of their own and women who were seasoned Moms and Grandma’s. Sometimes the groups knocked heads about what was best for the disadvantaged children to whom we administered good will, and inevitably someone from the latter camp would fire off the hurtful missive, “You girls don’t get it. You don’t have kids of your own!”

Back then, I disagreed. But now as I look at all the things my eleven year old and six year old have taught me, I finally get it. I do know a few things that child-free women can’t possibly know. So, what was it that I didn’t “get?” And how could I explain to new mothers that they are about to transform into another animal entirely?

Let’s start with your body. Hormones rule, here. If you think you’re a bit “off” while pregnant and hope that you will return to normal after you give birth, think again. You have been wired to nurture now and the explosion of oxytocin in postpartum life changes the way you think and behave. You’ll be amazed at how well you can cope without sleep. You’ll be confused about how to balance work and motherhood, for your body is programmed by millions of years of evolution to sit under a tree and nurse for a long, long while. You might find giant bursts of creativity that were untapped before. And, you may even have to struggle with your own internalized whore/madonna syndrome, as you feel the unfair pressure to return to your sexy self when you feel far more like a grumpy dairy cow.

For some, these struggles combine with a biological predisposition and morph into postpartum depression. Each year more than 800,000 women suffer from postpartum depression. That’s close to 1 in five, ladies. And the symptoms are so varied that they can be missed. Let’s see, how many new mothers dismiss symptoms like, a change in walking pace, low self-esteem, and bad memory? Seems like normal new mother behavior to me, yet these symptoms can be part of a bigger diagnosis. Check out the PPD symptom list below, and add to it the possibility for anxiety related symptoms:

• Depressed mood-tearfulness, hopelessness, and feeling empty inside, with or without severe anxiety.
• Loss of pleasure in either all or almost all of your daily activities.
• Appetite and weight change-usually a drop in appetite and weight, but sometimes the opposite.
• Sleep problems-usually trouble with sleeping, even when your baby is sleeping.
• Noticeable change in how you walk and talk-usually restlessness, but sometimes sluggishness.
• Extreme fatigue or loss of energy.
• Feelings of worthlessness or guilt, with no reasonable cause.
• Difficulty concentrating and making decisions.
• Thoughts about death or suicide. Some women with PPD have fleeting, frightening thoughts of harming their babies: these thoughts tend to be fearful thoughts, rather than urges to harm.

If this list feels a little familiar to you, I urge you to seek professional help. Despite the baby boom that you see portrayed in celebrity magazines, our culture is still anti-motherhood and PPD symptoms can be brought on by an unsupportive environment. Your body wants to lay low even though there are bills to pay and a marriage to attend to. Seek a therapist who really understands postpartum depression.

Now, once you have your meds, or your support, or your non-chemical remedy, let’s talk about your new place in the world. And let’s start with your village. Don’t freak out that your circle of friends may change. Your old child-free friends can take only so much baby talk and can offer little in the way of advice, so you’ll find yourself gravitating toward the Moms you meet in your new baby groups. And, I highly advise that you join some groups, whether it’s baby-and-me yoga, a breast-feeding support group, or a baby music class. Getting out of the house and co-mingling with other new moms will reduce your chances of depression and help you gain a whole lot of insight about motherhood. You will find your voice as a parent through comparing and contrasting yourself to other mothers.

Now onto your political self. New mothers see the world in a kind of technicolor as they begin to view life through the eyes of their children. You’ll notice things that you never noticed before, like bad parenting, highly sexualized advertising, public swearing, expensive healthcare, and streets without stroller-ready sidewalks. And, hopefully also you’ll find yourself marching out to right the world. Mothers are a political force to be reckoned with. Welcome to our club. And you don’t even have to leave your sleeping baby to make a difference. There are more than 900 Mom community web sites and countless other online communities that fight causes. By becoming involved you will become empowered as your begin to take the throne as the powerhouse of your home.

Speaking of power, I think that’s the biggest transformation that a new mother makes — from your lover’s hotty princess to a fully developed Queen. Mothers are the Queen of their world. There’s a saying in the south that sums up the power of motherhood, “When Mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.” You are now the emotional lightning rod and the gentle soothing wind to every other person in your nest. And this power can bring feelings of self-esteem unmatched by any paycheck. Mothers are the life-force of a household, providing food, a comfortable shelter, and, when necessary, a gentle admonishing or a supportive cheer. Whether you work outside the home, from home, or on your home, you are the most valued member of the team.

You have proven yourself. You have the capacity to create human life within your womb and nurture it to greatness in your nest. And this is the thing child-free women will never know. The secret confidence that comes from knowing you did something so magical. You created life and forever more you will nurture life. Mothers are almost God-like, in that way. And when you carry that force out into the world you will be awed by the power you have to affect change everywhere. You are now a mother in the world. All hail before you.

Boy, Girl … or Other?

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

boy_girl_or_other_pm-thumb-270x270Dr. Wendy Walsh: It’s the first three words that bring enormous excitement to any parent. Whether it’s read on an ultrasound, after an amniocentesis or CVS, or in the delivery room, hearing the sex of your child heralds an expectation of your parenting future. But what if the announcement is “other”?

Lately there has been much in the news about gender, particularly as it pertains to the world 800-meter women’s champion, South African runner Caster Semenya. The female track star with the masculine physique is currently undergoing gender tests, while her parents and some members of the South African media insist she’s a woman. Caster Semenya’s finish time was more than two seconds ahead of the second-place finisher, so Semenya’s gender has become the subject of an international investigation.

Many in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, and endocrinology have long acknowledged that human beings may fall into a third gender category: that is, a catch-all group of people whose gender is not clearly defined based on chromosomes, external genitalia, and gender identity. Human cells contain 22 pairs of matched autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes. A classic female has two X chromosomes, and a male has an X and a Y.

However, over 70 different variations of the sex chromosomes have been identified, and prenatal hormonal processes can be affected as well. The two most common chromosomal variations are Turner syndrome (1 in 2,000 female births), where a baby is born with normal female genitalia, however their reproductive organs do not develop and they do not grow breasts at puberty. These gals are actually missing one chromosome, but they tend to always self-identify as a woman.

Then there’s Klinefelter’s syndrome (1 in 500 male births). These guys are born anatomically male, however they have an extra female chromosome that impedes the continued development of their male, ahem, structures. As you can imagine, people with Klinefelter’s have a high incidence of gender identity disorder.

Hormones play a role too. In this category, the two most common variations are fetally androgenized females, who are born with ovaries and a womb and, a bonus, an external genitalia that looks more male than female. Or, how about DHT-deficient males who look female before puberty and become masculinized at puberty, with testes that suddenly descend?

The point of this article is not to give you a biology lesson nor speculate on the chromosomal makeup of Caster Semenya. Rather, it is to pose the question of whether it makes continued sense to lump all people into two neatly stacked categories of gender.

Historically, when a newborn was born with ambiguous genitalia, the parents were often asked to make a choice and the child endured a series of painful “cosmetic” procedures. These days, there’s a movement, mostly led by fetally androgenized females, to educate parents and discourage them from mutilating their precious bundle of joy until after puberty when gender is more set, and children can have a say in things.

And gender isn’t only biological. No matter what our chromosomes and genitalia indicate, gender identity is an individual matter. Some people feel more like a man. Others more like a woman. And some feel somewhere in the middle. It’s also important to separate this discussion from sexual orientation — being gay, straight, or bisexual can happen with any chromosomal combination.

In terms of sex and gender identity, we are one multifaceted world. And that will surely be reflected when I finally see a school form that reads, Sex: Male? Female? or Other?

Read more: http://www.momlogic.com/2009/09/boy_girl_or_other_gender_identity_caster_semenya.php#ixzz0RK05scPl

Your Unconscious — Look whose driving your car!

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

10424_152186811833_115788661833_3449596_98040_aHow many times have you asked yourself, “Why did I do that?” I should have learned that doesn’t work.

I have a favorite metaphor to explain how unconscious processes drive our behavior. Imagine that you have grown up, away from your troubled childhood, and have created your dream adult life. You are in the back of a limo. You have cash. And you look great. The only problem is the limo driver. You can’t see his/her face and no matter how often you order them to take you to the finest restaurant and most beautiful mansion, that darn driver keeps turning that car around and going back to some dirty bird restaurant you ate at as a kid. And rather than taking you to a mansion, your driver keeps pulling up to the house you grew up in. Urrgh!!!

Whether you are a layperson, like most screen writers, and use the term “sub”-conscious, or have training in Psychology and like to look smart by saying, “un”-conscious, the meaning is the same. We all have early life feelings that are out of our awareness, yet drive most of our conscious life.

So, are we a slave to our unconscious, or can we break the shackles of early life programming and think, feel, and behave as an adult? The answer is yes, but not without help. If we’re super lucky, we have a love relationship that both contains us and challenges us to grow. The rest of us pay for therapists to do that.

Sigmund Freud may have been a victim of his Victorian era, but he was a genius when it came to understanding the unconscious. He believed that by helping the unconscious become conscious, people can be relieved from psychic pain and bad behaviors. He also believed that dreams are the “royal road to the unconscious” in that they contain “pre-conscious” material. Not that dreams are literal. But that dreams are feelings with pictures. My advice: If you are choosing a therapist, ask them if they do dream therapy. There is plenty of material in the nocturnal theater of our minds.