Hi. I'm not a transsexual but I saw a documentary on Discovery Health ("I Am My Own Sister" -- I've seen this available several times since I saw it) that makes me think transsexualism may be due to a condition called chimerism. I don't know whether this has been discussed here yet, but wanted to post this because I know a lot of transsexuals still wonder if they're crazy. In chimerism, two separate eggs get fertilized and join before cell division. The individual this creates actually has two sets of DNA. They may appear perfectly normal but the "hidden" DNA resides in some, but not all, organs.
Hermaproditism is a form of chimerism. The documentary showed a child who had a black father and a white mother. The child was actually divided down the middle, black and male on one side, and white and female on the other. Each side had different DNA. They also featured two women whose childrens' DNA "proved" that they weren't the mothers' children, even thought the mothers knew very well that they had given birth to them. In both cases, extensive searching and biopsies finally revealed that in one them, one ovary was from the sister egg (which, if it hadn't merged with the other egg, would have developed as a fraternal twin); in the other, they found the "sister" DNA in her thyroid gland. They stopped searching once they had found it, so it probably existed in one of her ovaries too.
My theory is that transsexuals are chimeras -- merged male and female fertilized eggs. The body is one gender, but whatever part of the brain it is that determines what gender one feels is from the other egg. You're not crazy, or even weird. I suspect many more people are chimeras than know about it. If the DNA of the other egg ends up in your liver, you may never know. If it ends up in your "gender center", you'll know in spades.
I'm heterosexual, but 30 years ago I found myself attracted to both men and women. I (I'm a woman) tried having sex with a couple of women, but it made me feel like a man, and I hated it. I wasn't a man. My sexual identity was that I was a woman. That's why I believe there's a sexual identity center in the brain (or somewhere).
I've never seen the concept of chimerism put together with transsexualism in the medical literature, but that doesn't mean I'm wrong.
Good luck, everyone. I know it's a terrible struggle for you. I hope my theory gives you some relief.
ruby2zdy
I can't comment on the documentery you have seen, but I can say that this condition is very rare in humans, with such things as patchy skin,hair and eye pigmentations. I don't think it is something that will ever be related to being transsexual. That is only my opinion.
Marco
Quote from: ruby2zdy on August 01, 2006, 05:02:30 PM
Hi. I'm not a transsexual but I saw a documentary on Discovery Health ("I Am My Own Sister" -- I've seen this available several times since I saw it) that makes me think transsexualism may be due to a condition called chimerism. I don't know whether this has been discussed here yet, but wanted to post this because I know a lot of transsexuals still wonder if they're crazy. In chimerism, two separate eggs get fertilized and join before cell division. The individual this creates actually has two sets of DNA. They may appear perfectly normal but the "hidden" DNA resides in some, but not all, organs.
Hermaproditism is a form of chimerism. The documentary showed a child who had a black father and a white mother. The child was actually divided down the middle, black and male on one side, and white and female on the other. Each side had different DNA. They also featured two women whose childrens' DNA "proved" that they weren't the mothers' children, even thought the mothers knew very well that they had given birth to them. In both cases, extensive searching and biopsies finally revealed that in one them, one ovary was from the sister egg (which, if it hadn't merged with the other egg, would have developed as a fraternal twin); in the other, they found the "sister" DNA in her thyroid gland. They stopped searching once they had found it, so it probably existed in one of her ovaries too.
My theory is that transsexuals are chimeras -- merged male and female fertilized eggs. The body is one gender, but whatever part of the brain it is that determines what gender one feels is from the other egg. You're not crazy, or even weird. I suspect many more people are chimeras than know about it. If the DNA of the other egg ends up in your liver, you may never know. If it ends up in your "gender center", you'll know in spades.
I'm heterosexual, but 30 years ago I found myself attracted to both men and women. I (I'm a woman) tried having sex with a couple of women, but it made me feel like a man, and I hated it. I wasn't a man. My sexual identity was that I was a woman. That's why I believe there's a sexual identity center in the brain (or somewhere).
I've never seen the concept of chimerism put together with transsexualism in the medical literature, but that doesn't mean I'm wrong.
Good luck, everyone. I know it's a terrible struggle for you. I hope my theory gives you some relief.
ruby2zdy
Hello Ruby.
We have an article on this in our Wiki which can be found
here (https://www.susans.org/wiki/Chimerism) You will find that it links to other articles associated with this concept.
Steph
I'm replying to Marco's post. Not all "chimeras" have patchy skin, etc. The two women featured in "I am my own sister" had no outward evidence that they had two sets of DNA.
Wow. This is heady stuff. That's on the serious side.
Now, on the lighter side... I wonder if this is why I have two people living in my head ;)
Cindi
I'm a fraternal twin (2 separate eggs) and the other twin is female (my sister), so it may be a possibility. Maybe there was supposed to be triplets. ::) Personally, I don't believe I am a Chimera though. My body is too feminine, so I'm closer to being IS.
Melissa
Quote from: Cindianna_Jones on August 28, 2006, 12:44:55 AM
Wow. This is heady stuff. That's on the serious side.
Now, on the lighter side... I wonder if this is why I have two people living in my head ;)
Cindi
Roses are red
Violets are Blue
I'm a chimera
And so am I
;D ;D ;D Karen
Oh Karen, you gave me a good chuckle with that one.
Cindi
Thanks for the laugh, Karen! I can always use one more!
I think, though, that because IS and TS people commonly get chromosomal tests that widespread chimerism would be more widely reported in the professional, if not the informal, literature that abounds regarding transsexualism on the www.
Noch 'mal zwei pfennig!
helen