Gender Gap
What were the real reasons behind David
Reimer's suicide?
By John Colapinto

Just shy of a month ago, I got a call
from David Reimer's father telling me that David had taken his own
life. I was shocked, but I cannot say I was surprised. Anyone
familiar with David's life—as a baby, after a botched circumcision,
he underwent an operation to change him from boy to girl—would have
understood that the real mystery was how he managed to stay alive
for 38 years, given the physical and mental torments he suffered in
childhood and that haunted him the rest of his life. I'd argue that
a less courageous person than David would have put an end to things
long ago.
After David's suicide, press reports cited an array of reasons for
his despair: bad investments, marital problems, his brother's death
two years earlier. Surprisingly little emphasis was given to the
extraordinary circumstances of his upbringing. This was unfortunate
because to understand David's suicide, you first need to know his
anguished history, which I chronicled in my book As Nature Made
Him:The Boy Who Was Raised As a Girl.
David Reimer was one of the most famous patients in the annals of
medicine. Born in 1965 in Winnipeg, he was 8 months old when a
doctor used an electrocautery needle, instead of a scalpel, to
excise his foreskin during a routine circumcision, burning off his
entire penis as a result. David's parents (farm kids barely out of
their teens) were referred to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore,
home of the world's leading expert in gender identity, psychologist
Dr. John Money, who recommended a surgical sex change, from male to
female. David's parents eventually agreed to the radical procedure,
believing Dr. Money's claims that this was their sole hope for
raising a child who could have heterosexual intercourse—albeit as a
sterile woman with a synthetic vagina and a body feminized with
estrogen supplements.
For Dr. Money, David was the ultimate
experiment to prove that nurture, not nature, determines gender
identity and sexual orientation—an experiment all the more
irresistible because David was an identical twin. His brother,
Brian, would provide the perfect matched control, a genetic clone
raised as a boy.
David's infant "sex reassignment" was the first ever conducted on a
developmentally normal child. (Money had helped to pioneer the
procedure in hermaphrodites.) And according to Money's published
reports through the 1970s, the experiment was a success. The twins
were happy in their assigned roles: Brian a rough and tumble boy,
his sister Brenda a happy little girl. Money was featured in Time
magazine and included a chapter on the twins in his famous textbook
Man & Woman, Boy & Girl.
The reality was far more complicated. At age 2, Brenda angrily tore
off her dresses. She refused to play with dolls and would beat up
her brother and seize his toy cars and guns. In school, she was
relentlessly teased for her masculine gait, tastes, and behaviors.
She complained to her parents and teachers that she felt like a boy;
the adults—on Dr. Money's strict orders of secrecy—insisted that she
was only going through a phase. Meanwhile, Brenda's guilt-ridden
mother attempted suicide; her father lapsed into mute alcoholism;
the neglected Brian eventually descended into drug use, pretty
crime, and clinical depression.
When Brenda was 14, a local psychiatrist convinced her parents that
their daughter must be told the truth. David later said about the
revelation: "Suddenly it all made sense why I felt the way I did. I
wasn't some sort of weirdo. I wasn't crazy."
David soon embarked on the painful process of converting back to his
biological sex. A double mastectomy removed the breasts that had
grown as a result of estrogen therapy; multiple operations,
involving grafts and plastic prosthesis, created an artificial penis
and testicles. Regular testosterone injections masculinized his
musculature. Yet David was depressed over what he believed was the
impossibility of his ever marrying. He twice attempted suicide in
his early 20s.
David did eventually marry a big-hearted woman named Jane, but his
dark moods persisted. He was plagued by shaming memories of the
frightening annual visits to Dr. Money, who used pictures of naked
adults to "reinforce" Brenda's gender identity and who pressed her
to have further surgery on her "vagina."
When David was almost 30, he met Dr. Milton Diamond, a psychologist
at the University of Hawaii and a longtime rival of Dr. Money. A
biologist by training, Diamond had always been curious about the
fate of the famous twin, especially after Money mysteriously stopped
publishing follow-ups in the late 1970s. Through Diamond, David
learned that the supposed success of his sex reassignment had been
used to legitimize the widespread use of infant sex change in cases
of hermaphroditism and genital injury. Outraged, David agreed to
participate in a follow-up by Dr. Diamond, whose myth-shattering
paper (co-authored by Dr. Keith Sigmundson) was published in
Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine in March 1997 and was
featured on front pages across the globe.
I met David soon after, when he agreed to be interviewed by me for a
feature story in Rolling Stone. He subsequently agreed to
collaborate with me on a book about his life, As Nature Made Him,
published in February 2000. In the course of our interviews, David
told me that he could never forget his nightmare childhood, and he
sometimes hinted that he was living on borrowed time.
Most suicides, experts say, have multiple motives, which come
together in a perfect storm of misery. So it was with David. After
his twin Brian died of an overdose of antidepressants in the spring
of 2002, David sank into a depression. Though the two had been
estranged, David had, in recent months, taken to visiting Brian's
grave, leaving flowers and, at some point prior to his own suicide,
a note.
David also had marital difficulties. He was not easy to live with,
given his explosive anger, his cyclical depressions, his fears of
abandonment—all of which Jane weathered for almost 14 years. But
with David spiraling ever deeper into sloth and despair, she told
him on the weekend of May 2 that they should separate for a time.
David stormed out of the house. Two days later, Jane received a call
from the police, saying that they had found David but that he did
not want her to know his location. Two hours after that, Jane got
another call. This time the police told her that David was dead.
Genetics almost certainly contributed to David's suicide. His mother
has been a clinical depressive all her life; his brother suffered
from the same disease. How much of the Reimers' misery was due to
inherited depression, and how much to the nightmare circumstances
into which they had been thrown? David's mutilation and his parents'
guilt were tightly entwined, multiplying the mental anguish to which
the family members were already prone.
In some press reports, financial problems were given as the sole
motive in David's suicide. While this is absurdly reductive, it is
true that last fall David learned that he was the victim of an
alleged con man who had hoodwinked him out of $65,000—a loss that
ate at him and no doubt contributed to his despair.
In his final months, David was unemployed—for him, a disastrous
circumstance. When I first met him, seven years ago, he was a
janitor in a slaughter house—tough, physically demanding work that
he loved. But when the plant closed a few years ago, David never
found another full-time job. And thanks to me, he didn't have to. I
split all profits from the book with David, 50-50. This brought him
a substantial amount of money, as did a subsequent movie deal with
Peter Jackson, the director of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. With
no compelling financial need to work, David was able to sit around
his house and brood—a state of affairs for which I feel some guilt.
In the end, of course, it was what David was inclined to brood about
that killed him. David's blighted childhood was never far from his
mind. Just before he died, he talked to his wife about his sexual
"inadequacy," his inability to be a true husband. Jane tried to
reassure him. But David was already heading for the door.
On the morning of May 5, he retrieved a shotgun from his home while
Jane was at work and took it into the garage. There, with the
terrible, methodical fixedness of the suicide, he sawed off the
barrel. Then he drove to the nearby parking lot of a grocery store,
parked, raised the gun, and, I hope, ended his sufferings forever.
John Colapinto is the
author of
As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised a Girl. He is a
contributing editor at
Rolling Stone magazine where his original story
about David Reimer won a national magazine award for reporting. His
2001 novel is being developed for the
screen by Dreamworks.
