advertisement
She was born a boy. Now, Taksh has transformed into a beautiful 23-year-old woman who wants to be a stylist.
Kritika was her parents’ only son. When she became a woman at 22, her parents disowned her. However, she’s happily married now and other than her husband she doesn’t want to reveal her past to people in her new life. So, her in-laws and colleagues don’t know she was a boy.
They’ve been loved, rejected, discriminated against, given support. But through it all they’ve wanted only one thing – to change their bodies to align with the gender they identify with. These are stories of sex reassignment surgeries.
“Even when I was really, really young thinking of myself as a woman was the most natural thing ever,” says Taksh.
“But as a child we do not know those terms. And even I as a child didn’t know what was wrong with me. Because I knew physically I was a guy so I why did I feel like a girl?”
What we as a society fail to understand is that sex is biological, whereas gender is determined largely by the mind. It’s how you see yourself; an innate personal sense of being male or female.
In transgender people who go for sex reassignment, sex and gender may not be in alignment. And they that they are born in the wrong body. It’s known as gender dysphoria.
Taksh and Kritika’s childhoods paint two contrasting pictures.
Kritika, however, stopped stepping out of her house as a kid and had no friends.
She was a guy but her mannerisms were feminine. So, people used to call her gay, chhakka, hijra and other insults that effeminate guys are subjected to.
Taksh’s parents have always been supportive of her and her choices. Even when initially in Class 9, she came out to them as gay. Taksh’s mother laughs and recalls the coming out story.
Taksh recounts, “Before puberty hit, I never thought of my body as something that I was trapped in or unhappy with. But once puberty started to come about I despised having hair on my body.”
Her mother tells us that around 18, Taksh opened up about wanting to modify her body. She put it into words that “I don’t like being what I am and if I can’t be what I want to be then I’d rather not live.”
Kritika had to quit her studies because of the discrimination and abuse she faced owing to her femininity.
"I had to leave engineering in second year because I was a boy that time and was living in the boy’s hostel. But my mannerisms were feminine. And because of that I went through sexual abuse and depression. My gender dysphoria shot up and I wanted kill myself that time,” Kritika recalls with a straight face.
When Taksh first found out what a transgender woman was, she “felt this insane amount of peace.” “I knew I wasn’t some dirty thing or a slur. I knew that what I was, was dignified and could lead a long life.”
I was around 18, when I left my studies and I decided to start my transition.
Kritika’s parents didn’t want her to change her sex. They said they won’t help her out. She was 18 when she quit her studies and decided to start her transition.
How did Taksh’s parents come to terms with their son becoming a woman?
“It is never easy,” pat comes Taksh’s father’s reply. “But I was quite clear in my mind that this is what is required to get the child’s dysphoria removed. So, we decided to get the surgery done.”
Taksh’s mother, however, took some time to understand and even accept. “I had no problem having two daughters, that was never an issue. But why should a child go through so much of pain, physical and mental.”
It’s not a magical journey. It’s a long, taxing and painful medical process. But that is the only thing Taksh and Kritika had wanted for so long.
Before a person undergoes sex reassignment surgery, there a number of hurdles they have to cross.
A typical transition from male to female or vice versa involves:
A psychiatrist first makes sure that the person is in the right state of mind to undergo this irreversible change. Once, they give an approval, hormone treatment starts. In this, they’re given the hormone of the sex they want to change to, which modifies the voice, skin, face, and body.
And surgery is the last step.
However, it’s an extremely expensive procedure, and not all can afford it. Still the number of surgeries happening in India is huge.
Dr Richie Gupta, Taksh and Kritika’s surgeon says that in their hospital alone, they perform around 100-150 sex reassignment surgeries a year.
There are two types of surgeries – top surgery and bottom surgery. For male-to-female individuals, bottom surgery is the more important one, which involves removing the penis and creating a vagina and clitoris.
The 6-hour long surgery involves converting the shaft of the penis into the vaginal cavity and the scrotal skin becomes the folds of the vagina.
Male-to-female surgery:
Some people choose not to go for the first since hormone therapy can lead to the development of breasts.
Female-to-male surgery:
Kritika is legally married now.
Kritika’s office colleagues or her in-laws, however, don’t know about her past. She I never felt the need to bring it up.
“Why should I tell anyone, it is something very personal. The person who I have to spend my life with knows and that’s enough,” she explains.
What about sexual feelings? Does she have the same experience as other women?
“See, that’s not why I changed my body but it’s an important part of everyone’s lives. I feel it the same way as any other woman would feel.”
A vagina that’s constructed is practically undetectable from that of a woman who was born with it.
An extremely important step for transgender people is getting their documentation changed.
Even as there is a law permitting them to get their gender changed on documents without any hassle or certifications, the government officials aren’t a helpful lot.
“It almost felt like we were doing something wrong which we weren’t,” exclaims an annoyed Taksh.
When we talk of rights, it all starts with a document. Kritika explains the ordeal transgender people go through.
She tried to change my name and gender. But even after a Supreme Court verdict ordering otherwise, the government’s policy didn’t allow that change until you have the surgery certificate.
“And I was financially too weak to get my surgery that time. But that doesn’t mean the government should let me suffer. So then I decided to fight because this policy change won’t just help me but millions of transgender people,” announces a determined Kritika.
Trans people are not different from the society. It is high time that the society accepts them for what they are. And gives them all rights and opportunities that are bestowed on them by the Constitution of India.
Video Editor: Prashant Chauhan
Camerapersons: Abhay Sharma, Abhishek Ranjan, Athar Rather and Shiv Kumar Maurya
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 10 Aug 2018,05:08 PM IST