Graham was born in the United Kingdom in 1969 with the first name Sarah. He has XY chromosomes, but due to a diagnosis of complete androgen insensitivity syndrome (CAIS), he was identified and raised as a girl.[4] Doctors lied to him and his parents about his diagnosis, subjected him to repeated medical investigations, and removed his internal testes (which the doctors claimed were ovaries) at age seven or eight "to protect him from cancer and imminent death", resulting in him needing otherwise-unnecessary hormone replacement therapy from age 12.[4][5] Graham was not given his CAIS diagnosis until he was 25. He was offered no support and, already a regular drug user, the diagnosis led to a period of self-destruction including alcohol and drug addiction.[4][6][7] After several months of treatment, Graham recovered.[8] He later became an addiction counsellor, saying "I have turned my pain into my work".[7][9] Graham later found that CAIS was likely a misdiagnosis, and that he more likely has partial androgen insensitivity syndrome (PAIS).[10]
Graham is non-binary and uses he/him and they/them pronouns.[11]
Career and activism
Graham worked as an addiction counsellor and therapist, running his own drug rehabilitation company which included a weekly LGBTI addiction and recovery therapy group.[12] He has written articles on drug addiction for a variety of newspapers and magazines including The Sun, The Times, and Diva, and appeared on radio and television programmes including The Today Programme, BBC News, and This Morning.[13]
Because of his activism, The Independent on Sunday listed him as a "national treasure" in its 2011 "Pink List", and in the renamed 2015 "Rainbow List" called him the second most influential LGBT person in the UK.[12][17] Graham has advocated for intersex human rights, including speaking out against surgery to "normalise" intersex children's bodies.[7] He has also investigated legal recognition of intersex as a distinct gender, and praised Germany for allowing intersex babies to be recorded as neither male nor female.[5][18] In 2020, Graham joined other intersex activists including River Gallo to help the Los Angeles LGBT Center expand care for intersex patients.[19]
Graham has appeared as a guest on several podcasts, including Caitlin Durante'sSludge: An American Healthcare Story,[20]Nadège August'sWhat The Fockery?,[21][22] Lauren Wallett's The Creativity Coach,[23] and Jeff Miller and Anthony Navarro's Talk Out Loud.[24]
Creative works
In 2010, Graham contributed an essay to the BBC Radio 3 "Letter to My Body" series, in which he expressed how the discovery that he was intersex led to addiction and depression.[25] In 2017, Graham wrote and performed a solo play titled Angels are Intersex. After Angels are Intersex, he began using the name Seven Graham and they/them pronouns (later adopting he/they pronouns).[2][11] Graham was an executive producer of the 2018 short film Ponyboi, along with executive producers Stephen Fry, Johan Sorenson, Elizabeth Sorenson, and DJ Rutherford, and co-producers Emma Thompson, Rachel Singer, and Jamison Monroe.[26] It was the first film to feature an intersex actor, River Gallo, playing the role of an intersex person.[3]