Susan's Place Logo

News:

Please be sure to review The Site terms of service, and rules to live by

Main Menu

Came out at work as Trans

Started by Ms. Bee, June 27, 2018, 07:56:37 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Ms. Bee

I came out at my corporate job as trans at my job of 10 years. My current manger is a paternity leave, and the guy above him just got in his role like a week ago. This made it a little challenging to get the ball rolling. But HR connected with my our LOB Executive who is over everybody in my dept. She's in another state.

I have a unique role where i work as a team with people in FL and AZ. I gave HR a "go live" date that was coming up in like five days. Well they had to communicate with our LOB Exec and come up with a communication plan for my team. I also support five other teams on my floor who known me for x number of years as my male name. My exec wanted to inform them as well. So Thursday of last week they put a telepresence meeting for my entire team of like 15 people. The LOB Exec told them I will be going by a new name as of this date, using women's restroom, and going by female pronouns. I was present in that meeting. A video was shown for educational purposes. It went positive. A few questions were asked. Lasted about 35 minutes.

Then I had to draft a list of people I interact with more often who I have a rapport with on the other 5 teams I support. So I pulled up the directory and went person by person and thought "Have I made personal connection with this person?" "Did this person ever have meaningful interactions where it may be different with my change?" "Have I worked with this individual for 5 years or more?" If the answer was "yes" to any of those questions I added them to the list. This list added up to 22 people.

The 22 people were invited to a meeting to discuss the upcoming changes to take place in a few days. I didn't join this one. They basically got the same message as my team did. I heard the responses and feedback were positive from those who was there. Whew but i still had anxiety about how each person took it. But I can't worry about others I am doing this for me.

I sit by a different team of people who see me walk in and out each day. I didn't know but I found  out the next day that whole team was told in a brief team meeting, not from our LOB Exec though just a regular meeting that team was told.

Today was my first day coming in as a female. Dress, wig, makeup, flats etc. I was very calm leaving the house. I had a high point leading in to work. A couple people from my list came to check on me periodically. That was a little annoying because I was fine. Then I hit a low point at about 2 o'clock idk why. Eat lunch, took my vitapak then got on a high emotionally. Today I was myself. Didn't alter my voice at all. A number of people used my new name "Bree". Some called me by my birth name. I have to get used to this new name, because I am not referred by it often. But with time I think that will come. I made it and I am here to tell you all about it.

Thank you to everyone who post in this forum. Throughout the day i read your post and what you experience and it gives me a slighter of hope to continue. I am not on HRT at the moment. I won't be doing HRT until next year but I now am getting Real World Experience. That in itself is a BIG step. Thank you and love you all.
  •  

KathyLauren

Congratulations, Bree.  Coming out at work is a huge step.  Well done!  I am glad it went well for you.
2015-07-04 Awakening; 2015-11-15 Out to self; 2016-06-22 Out to wife; 2016-10-27 First time presenting in public; 2017-01-20 Started HRT!!; 2017-04-20 Out publicly; 2017-07-10 Legal name change; 2019-02-15 Approval for GRS; 2019-08-02 Official gender change; 2020-03-11 GRS; 2020-09-17 New birth certificate
  •  

JudiBlueEyes

Yes, congratulations on making it through the all important first day!   The next will be easier.  But remember there will be down times too, but you're there for the long haul.  Yeah!

Judi
But now old friends they're acting strange
They shake their heads, they say I've changed
Well something's lost, but something's gained
In living every day.
  •  

Gertrude

Pretty cool. One question: does your company have a formal process for this that you knew about ahead of time? Is it in the staff manual or on an internal website?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
  •  

Julie -2010

Bree,

  I so happy for you.  That is a big step.  I've thought about it multiple times.  Sounds like the company handled it in the right way.

YEA!!

Julie
"me to be my true and authentic self, my own person, one who belonged to the infinitely loving Creator, with all the inherent flaws that come with it."  - Jonathan S. Williams
  •  

Ms. Bee

Quote from: Gertrude on June 27, 2018, 10:39:42 PM
Pretty cool. One question: does your company have a formal process for this that you knew about ahead of time? Is it in the staff manual or on an internal website?

We have a life event services team who helps teammates deal with significant life events. They have designated people assigned for Transgender Support. I called them in November of last year to see how I was covered as an employee. Then I waited until I was comfortable (June 2018) and told them I am ready to come to work as ME. TG support coordinates with the organization leaders to come up with a support plan.
  •  

Ms. Bee

Quote from: KathyLauren on June 27, 2018, 08:17:37 PM
Congratulations, Bree.  Coming out at work is a huge step.  Well done!  I am glad it went well for you.

Thank you KathyLauren for my first reply. I find your life story very interesting. Much respect to u.
  •  

Gertrude

Quote from: Ms. Bee on June 28, 2018, 09:31:09 PM
We have a life event services team who helps teammates deal with significant life events. They have designated people assigned for Transgender Support. I called them in November of last year to see how I was covered as an employee. Then I waited until I was comfortable (June 2018) and told them I am ready to come to work as ME. TG support coordinates with the organization leaders to come up with a support plan.
I work for a state university with 23k employees and we don't have that. To find out anything trans related is like a Dan brown novel. I actually had to go to the equal opportunity people to have them tell hr to answer my questions, which had to do with coverage for trans related healthcare. There's a huge disconnect there.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
  •  

Sam79

Congrats Bree, transition goals ftw. I hope my coming out at work goes as well.

Sent from my HTC 10 using Tapatalk

  •  

RobynTx

Congrats on the welcoming at work.  When I came out I just posted it on Facebook.  From there it spread like wildfire.  I admit that first shift after was nerve wrecking but it ended up being just like any other day.  We wear uniforms so there is no difference between male and female.  I'm still wearing my old ones fitted when I was a male and liked things large.  No point in getting refitted since the service I work for is leaving town on July 31st.  I have new uniforms measured for my female frame ready to go come August 1st. These are a lot nicer in my opinion.

I'm glad everything has worked out so far for you.  Keep it up.


  •  

Ms. Bee

Thank you all for the kind words. I am three day in going to work. Everyone has been professional and accepting for the most part. I get pings my HR rep, our LOB Exec called me the day after, and a few close people still stop to check to make sure all is good. There are a handful of people don't speak to me as much since I came out. One lady I suspect goes the opposite way to the bathroom to not see me (I sit by the restrooms). Because before she would walk past my desk say "hello" or "good morning" but I haven't seen her come by at all. Another friend of mine from work saw me for the first time on yesterday. He works on a different floor but came up to my floor. I think he's scared of me because his communication with me is very limited to "hi" and that's it. We used to catch up when we saw each other on campus. Our conversations would gear around life, our 401k's, church etc. The last two days he's only said "Hi Bro", yes he called me "bro" twice. None of this makes me want to go back. But I just want to share the good and not so positive I've experienced these three days. Cheers

Bree
  •