I’ve got no problem with them, but these are obviously kids who grew up in a different age than me, and it shows, I know what could seem a joke to me could come off different to them. Especially this being In the trades and the type of jokes we make here. I don’t want to make anyone uncomfortable, we’re all trying to just get through the day after all

Edit: I have learned, they used to be female, transitioned to male. (So trans-masc? I’m probably messing that up) Lesbian, and non-binary, thankfully they brought it up which was very helpful as I wasn’t sure if it was appropriate to ask

  • 𝕱𝖎𝖗𝖊𝖜𝖎𝖙𝖈𝖍@lemmy.world
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    Im trans with over 10 years of experience in the industry

    There’s really not a lot to it. Respect their chosen names and pronouns, and don’t ask them random questions about being trans unless they’re open to it. They know more about themselves than you do, so trust them. Listen when/if they get close enough to talk about their experiences, and reassure them that this is a safe space. We just want a basic level of respect and empathy.

    Happy to answer any questions.

  • shaggyb@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    If you struggle with pronouns, apologize casually when the pronouns come up.

    As a fellow old, the kids don’t seem to necessarily get it that my brain is wired pretty hard not to change pronouns, but they do seem to appreciate the effort and the discussion that it’s a challenge rather than just fucking it up with no explanation.

    Otherwise, be mindful that they take a lot of shit for parts of themselves that are background attributes for the rest of us. They can get pretty tired of it. A friendly person who regards them as just people may be the best thing they can get from anyone.

  • Proprietary_Blend@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Your job is to train them. They’re people. You’re a person. Just go with that

    I think if you love as a person them you’ll be good.

    That’s what I do and it’s worked out pretty great!

      • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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        1 month ago

        Your comment highlights one of the difficulties I find with going between treating someone exactly as you would anyone else, while also dealing with particular sensitivities or sensibilities of that person. Even trying to describe how to be less offensive, includes wording that can sound offensive to some, justifiably so based on experience.

        But all in all, I think most people will recognize good faith efforts and accept quick apologies and corrections when we make mistakes. We’re not perfect.

        • Randomocity@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          Completely agree and it doesn’t help that it’s an ever moving goalpost. I feel like most people understand that as long as you are acting in good faith it’s all fine.

  • Hello_there@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    Just start saying ‘they’ for everyone that’s work related. No matter on LGBT status.
    Makes it easier to not fuck up.

    • hovercat@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 month ago

      Use they, unless you know their pronouns. Unfortunately, a lot of people use “they” because they don’t want to use the correct pronouns and it seems more innocent than just overtly misgendering someone.

    • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      As a trans person, no, do not do this. This is known as degendering people. It shows a total disregard for putting forth any effort to understand or respect others. We always know when people do this because it is still misgendering when you know their pronouns are not they/them.

      While using they/them pronouns for all queer people or using a person’s name instead of a pronoun might feel easier for certain people, this is also a form of misgendering called “degendering.”

      https://lgbtq.ucsf.edu/pronouns-101

      It feels gross, it’s not a viable solution.

      • RedPostItNote@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        If you’re going to take people’s honest attempts at being polite as an attack, you’re going to have a bad life.

        • DrivebyHaiku@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          Hey, enby here. While I definitely benefit from they being a default I have enough binary trans friends who have this experience. What the person you are replying to is giving you is something referred to as nuance. A solve put forward by a well meaning cis person doesn’t automatically work just because it seems like it should to you. Sometimes it causes new problems and when someone tells you about them it’s a good idea to not assume it’s them trying to be a dick or difficult about something but actually explaining why that solve isn’t always a good thing.

          If your intention is to make a trans person actually comfortable instead of getting defensive then listening when these things come up instead of telling them they are trying to be trouble on purpose is the play.

          Not everything works for every trans person and inside the trans community there is something sometimes referred to as “the coward’s they”. It’s a well known phenomenon where a physical transition gets to a certain point the brain stops easily registering and sorting someone as being their birth sex because they seemlessly look and act as their gender so the automatic neurological system of assigning them a sex value flips fully to the new and desired setting. You see it on conservative media sometimes where they slip up and use the actual correct pronouns and have to correct themselves back over to using the wrong pronouns… Problem being is it causes the same mental redirect issues for a Conservative actively dodging the automatic reaction as learning to use Non-binary pronouns so as a compromise these people use “they” instead because it is easier to trick the sorter and strand themselves in the safe neutral ground where they can identify a person as “not actually a woman/man” without triggering their audience by using correct pronouns for a trans person.

          When you use they/them pronouns for a binary trans person it’s interpreted by the brain of the trans person as you seeing and reacting to all the aspects of their body that makes them visibly trans and your brain’s automatic sex recognition system sorting them into this “not enough” category. It’s effectively less hurtful than full misgendering… But it still pings the bit of the brain that is seeing their own body through your perception via your words. It causes they same dysphoric reaction where their mind picks over all the parts of their body that would cause you to react by misgendering or degendering them. The whole point of preferred pronouns is to help us stop that mental reaction from happening as much.

          It is perfectly safe to use they/them pronouns for cis people who do not have dysphoric reactions at all and for non-binary people who actively use those pronouns but if someone rocks up looking like they are trying to project a full binary situation it’s worth going for the full binary pronoun option because they are specifically putting in the work to be as obvious as possible so that people know that’s what they want.

        • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 month ago

          Victim blaming and belittling other people’s problems is also lame, try not to do that, either.

          “Ow this hurts me please stop”

          “If you take this as an attack, you’re dumb and will be miserable, so just don’t”

          • frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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            1 month ago

            I think where you’re messing up is making the assumption that the person will stick with “they” even after learning pronouns. Defaulting to they when a person doesn’t know is just the smart, respectful play. As long as the person makes an honest effort to use the correct pronoun when corrected, that’s all that can be asked.

            • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              1 month ago

              Being respectful is definitely the heart of it. I think it’s important to make a show of goodwill and listen even if you accidentally fuck stuff up. We’re all human and make mistakes, and like you say, it’s the honest effort that makes all the difference and is all that’s ever really asked.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      It’s a good place to start. Sometimes a trans person wants gendered pronouns. But it’s better to use something neutral than to use the wrong one. I have always found that if you use the actual right pronouns, even once, it shows you are trying and that is appreciated forever.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I already do this with because of how many people I know and work with that have names not exclusively used by men or women.

      • njordomir@lemmy.world
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        I work with enough foreigners that I almost HAVE to do this since I rarely see them face to face and have no real indicators aside from their name. If your name is 20 characters long and 18 of them are consonants, I’m gonna use “they” at work, just to avoid any undue offense. So far, if someone had a problem with me it was because of my employer, not my own words or behavior.

    • Creat@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 month ago

      I assume op is English speaking, but just fyi this doesn’t work in every language, would make things a lot simpler.

  • Pudutr0ñ@feddit.cl
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    1 month ago

    This is not a comprehensive list, but you should probably avoid talking about your sex life.

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    Treat them like any other person. Their gender/identity should have absolutely zero impact on the ability to do their job. So you don’t even need to ask this question. If you feel like you’re walking on eggshells and scared of bringing up an offensive topic, then that’s an issue with you, not with them. There’s nothing that you say that should be offending them since it’s absolutely irrelevant to work.

    Regardless of who your coworkers are, topics like gender identity or politics should NEVER be discussed in the workplace. If you simply avoid engaging in those types of topics then you will be safe. Talking about those things at work is an absolute horrendous idea, regardless of who the coworkers are. Those convos don’t belong in the workplace.

    • JeSuisUnHombre@lemm.ee
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      I think some politics is healthy to talk about in certain work situations. Definitely not the red vs blue tribal nonsense, but discussing and understanding material conditions

      • FeelzGoodMan420@eviltoast.org
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        The only politics that should be discussed at work are policies that directly impact the business. For example, my company has many conversations and meetings around impacts from Trump’s tariffs. No one gives an opinion on what their politics are. Not a single one. We discuss the impact on the business and how we can mitigate them. It ends there.

        • JeSuisUnHombre@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          I think many workplaces function better when workers are able to develop camaraderie by talking and joking about things that aren’t strictly related to work

    • howrar@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      When someone starts complaining about what bathroom everyone is using, you can’t just ignore it and hope it goes away. It’s your job as their superior to address these issues.

      Similarly,

      Their gender/identity should have absolutely zero impact on the ability to do their job.

      Making this stance clear requires talking about gender identity and politics.

  • hungryphrog@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    Well, one thing I know is: make sure you don’t out them. If a kid has transphobic parents, you really don’t want to accidentally inform them their kid is trans.

      • LadyButterflyshe/her@lazysoci.al
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        1 month ago

        Great start. It also goes for work. Even if they’re open about it, just don’t allow comment on it at all at work. People quite often say “so there’s a lad working on X team and he’s trans but you’d never know” or needlessly say “oh yeah Katie, she’s trans”. Shut that down RUTHLESSLY around you unless the trans person says not to

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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          I dont understand people’s need to share shit like that.

          It’s up there with (though obviously not as private and sensitive as) when people tell you a story about someone they interacted with and just have to make sure you know the skin colour of the person when it holds zero relevance to the story.

  • Taleya@aussie.zone
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    1 month ago

    Pick the one that’s been working there longest and ask them these questions. Check in they feel ok with how the workplace is trucking

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    1 month ago

    Probably wouldn’t be a bad idea to do something along the lines of stating upfront that “if anyone in the company does anything to offend you, please report it to the appropriate channels. You’ll have our full support. We’re here to get work done, not to make people feel bad”

    You’re not likely going to say by accident something they haven’t heard before, or to offend them in a new and novel way, But establishing and occasionally reinforcing the fact that they don’t have to tolerate it, that putting up with abuse is not part of their job, and that they have the boss’s backing at the same level of the non-LGBTQ employees should they find themselves being abused or offended, would probably go a decent way in minimizing the risk of something actually bad happening.

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      You’re not likely going to say by accident something they haven’t heard before, or to offend them in a new and novel way

      Not OP, but you underestimate my foot in mouth capacity.

      20 years ago, my sister was dating a jock. Real body builder type. Probably a bigger musclehead than most pro-wrestlers.

      What I was trying to convay is that we should make a superhero costume for him to wear, and make a comic book out of it.

      What was percieved instead is that he should run around town and suck everybodys nuts in his mouth for their approval.

      I DARE you to try to connect how that came out so wrongly worded.

    • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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      please report it to the appropriate channels

      Telling them that you personally will be there for them is really the only guarantee you can make without blindly relying on third parties to act with compassion. So telling them to come to you so that you can then together go through the rest of the process is imo the better idea. They can always choose to just ignore you, but making them go to some shitty HR office by themselves also sucks.

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Yeah, I’d only encourage reporting if I knew 100% beyond a shadow of a doubt that the person who would be taking the report is also an ally. And even then, I’d still hesitate to encourage it.

        My workplace is… Interesting. I work in an arts department for an employer which doesn’t do a lot of art otherwise. Each department is managed by a specific person in HR. My department happens to be managed by a raging transphobe. We also happen to have the highest amount of trans people per capita than any other department… Because, ya know, art.

        Our HR person requires that they use their deadname for all of their work stuff. Their work email uses the initials for their deadname. Their Windows username uses their deadname. Their RFID ID badge and name tag both use their deadname. Et cetera… She claims it is company policy to require official government names on everything.

        Except it’s not. That policy doesn’t exist. It’s just something she makes up every time a trans person gets hired. There’s even someone in HR who uses a chosen name for all of their work stuff. Our hiring manager has tried to go through or around her multiple times, but gets bounced back to the transphobe every single time. Because apparently the “your department has a specific HR person” is a rule that is enforced throughout all of HR, but the deadname thing is only enforced by our specific HR person.

        The hiring manager does what he can to insulate them from it, but there are certain things he can’t control. For instance, he orders them new custom name tags, so they don’t have to walk around with their deadname stuck to their shirt. But he can’t order new RFID ID badges, because those are created by our IT department, and they use whatever name is in the system. He can’t change their windows username, or their work email address.

        And what are those trans employees going to do? Go to HR to report it?

        • JennyLaFae@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 month ago

          Re: what are trans employees supposed to do.

          At one point the path was documenting disparate behavior and taking up the lawsuit path, but I’m pretty sure my employer could write transgender on the reason for termination line and the eeoc won’t touch it under this administration

  • HappyTimeHarry@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Im curious what could come off as a joke to you but would offend a trans person but not offend other (similarly aged) people.

    If your joke might be offensive to anyone, its probably best to save it for outside of the workplace if you share it at all.

    Not saying dont make any jokes, just that your jokes shouldn’t be referencing someones gender or appearance or at the expense of someone else in general.

    • atro_city@fedia.io
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      1 month ago

      If your joke might be offensive to anyone, its probably best to save it for outside of the workplace if you share it at all.

      That’s not good advice. Any joke can be offensive to someone - especially when people are committed to being offended.

    • stephen01king@lemmy.zip
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      Its impossible to know if your joke might be offensive to others when you live different lifestyles.

      It’s like telling people not to serve food that might be prohibited by the religion of one of their dinner guests when they have never interacted with the religion before.

      What OP does here is trying to educate himself, which is the right move, in my opinion.

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      I get where you’re coming from, and we’ve all seen bad faith “advice” seeking (sea lioning), but also most of us have interacted with people who are well-meaning yet know they have tons of learned behaviors they’ve never needed to question.

      For example, a friend had a boss in a male-dominated industry (construction) who, at the end of a client lunch with several cis men, bid them farewell with “bye ladies.” When they were back in the car she called him out on it “is ‘ladies’ supposed to imply something?” and he immediately admitted “dammit I know. I’m sorry.”

      She knew he knew as he said it that it wasn’t the right thing and just hadn’t considered it before, but it took situations like that to make him consider it in advance. And it sounds like he did. She said he began to make eye contact to check his wording in meetings, which she took to indicate it being present in his mind, that he was actually trying.

      I’m just saying asking and trying to consider little things in advance is ally behavior and should be encouraged unless it’s obviously in bad faith.

      • HappyTimeHarry@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        I didnt think the poster was in bad faith, i was just genuinely curious as im not really around environments like that these days so i kind of assumed it would be something sexist or creepy.

        • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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          Ah understood. From the conscientious wording, I would guess that’s the sort of stuff they worked on quite a few years ago. But I’m wrong often enough, good looking out.

    • Dragonstaff@leminal.space
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      1 month ago

      Maybe “engaging with someone’s physical presentation” was just always a bad idea and you’ve just recently realized that.

      Treating people with kindness and respect mostly works out fine.

    • Dragonstaff@leminal.space
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      How many trans people do you know? Has a trans person gotten mad at you for something?

      Charitably, it seems like people who have never met trans people seem to think they’re balls of tinder, waiting to explode at any imagined slight. There is a lot of misinformation and propaganda out there and trans people are a punching bag.

      Yes, words change a lot, and maybe someone might ask you to use a different word. That’s not an attack on you.

      Yeah, you might meet someone on a bad day or there could be a misunderstanding, but, in general, treating people with kindness and respect works out pretty well.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Treat them like anyone else by default and make accommodations if you need to and it’s reasonable.

    You’re asking with good intentions, but the best answer for any group will always be that. Shit, not even by groups. On a human by human basis just do that, there’s a crazy amount of human variation and it’s not always obvious.

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    1 month ago

    First of all, good for you for asking the question. I think many people are afraid to ask these things even if they want to be respectful and inclusive for fear of coming off as backward or ignorant, but I think asking questions in good faith shows that we’re willing to listen and learn.

    But most importantly, just treat them with the same respect you’d treat anyone else! Gender identity isn’t really that big of a deal, and after you get to know some trans folks you’ll come to that realization quickly that they’re just regular people!

  • jawa22@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    Just treat them with respect like anyone else. There are 3 topics to avoid in any work place for anyone: religion, politics, and sex life. That’s just a good general rule for all forced mixed company situations.

    • aasatru@kbin.earth
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      1 month ago

      Avoiding politics might be wise on some level, but by all means do talk about unionizing.