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Coming out at work (office work)

Started by Alexmakenoise, November 09, 2014, 02:11:54 PM

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Alexmakenoise

For the guys who have come out at work, how did you handle it?  I work in an office of about 700 people and am on a first name basis with a lot of them since I'm in a support role.  My office is really LGBT-friendly so  that won't be an issue.  I'm more concerned about the logistics.  I imagine I'll have to send out a coming out email to everyone?  I don't think I'm the only trans person there, but I might be the first to begin my transition while working there.
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ChrisRokk

I told my boss about my intention to start biological transition first, and I told him what my new name would be.  That was it.  He handled everything else, and everyone started calling me the right name, and nothing has ever been weird or awkward at my job regarding transition since.

I'm guessing that is the best route, either try your immediate boss or go to HR and see what the policy is on transition.
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FTMax

Interested in hearing from others here as well. I'm starting T on Friday, and I am planning to tell my boss prior to then.

My boss is super liberal and a big LGBTQ advocate, so I'm sure he won't have any issues with it, but I'm also not sure how he intends to tell everyone else or if he'll expect me to do it. My office only has 3 other people, but there are another ~50 or so people in the company abroad as well as 60 clients (and all of their staff) that I work with on a regular basis.

I just really don't want anyone making a big deal out of it? My family hasn't made a big deal out of it, my friends haven't made a big deal out of it, and I'm not sure how I'd take it if there was a ton of drama.
T: 12/5/2014 | Top: 4/21/2015 | Hysto: 2/6/2016 | Meta: 3/21/2017

I don't come here anymore, so if you need to get in touch send an email: maxdoeswork AT protonmail.com
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GnomeKid

yea... I feel the same way.. My work has more like 7 people though not 700...

The more I've thought about it the more I realize its just one of those things that might come up some day like anything in my life.  Unfortunately I don't feel like people can really know me very well unless they know I'm trans.  What I've come to realize though is that applies really to everything about life. 

The people at work don't know lots of stuff about me.  They don't know about many of my interests , my past experiences, influential people I've had in my life, even what my family is like.... I don't go out of my way to tell people how many siblings I have... whether or not my parents are still together... if I have any allergies...(ect...ect...ect...)  The only way they'll learn any of those things is if they come up casually in conversation.  If I went out of my way to expose any part of my life awkwardly out of context it would kind of be making a big deal of it.  Coming out at work is no different.  If you go out of your way to tell people about something it makes it a thing.  Unfortunately, trans things don't come up often in a way which is conducive to coming out, and the uniqueness of being trans tends to catch people off guard as it is. 

I don't know.  Its an issue I face as well.  My stance is that if it comes up I won't censor myself, but I'm not going to bring it up out of the blue.  Maybe they'll never know.  Hopefully some day they do.  I like people to know because its good diplomacy.  People are more likely to stand up for trans people if they know/have known and liked a trans person.  and all that... Makes me regret not coming out in grad school, but I just never found a way to do so without making it a thing.   
I solemnly swear I am up to no good.

"Oh what a cute little girl, or boy if you grow up and feel thats whats inside you" - Liz Lemon

Happy to be queer!    ;)
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Ms Grace

Speak with your HR department about the best way to proceed.
Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Alexmakenoise

Quote from: Ms Grace on November 09, 2014, 11:23:01 PM
Speak with your HR department about the best way to proceed.

That will be easy!  We have a VERY pro-diversity HR department.  One of the HR leaders also leads the LGBTQ group.

It's weird - people already seem curious about me since I look butch and belong to the LGBTQ group but don't date women.  And I mention my trans friends from time to time.  So I doubt it will be a shock.

I just wonder how it will be announced, or how I'll anounce it.  Maybe I'll put New Name (Formerly Old Name) in my email signature like people do when they get married?
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Ms Grace

My experience was to let people know myself at a meeting (mind yo, I work in a very small organisation) and to change everything including signature (no formerly known as) -  a strong break is better and allows people to replace the former you with the new you.
Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Cindy

I agree very much on the strong change. I made the mistake of going from 'Peter' to Peta Cindy. I should have gone straight to Cindy, it would have been a lot less confusing for everyone.

IMO people are very willing to accept but you have to make it as clear as possible for them. Only the real ignorant twits want to insult you, just try and make it easy for the rest so they can adjust quickly.

As ever you have known you are a man (or in my & Grace's case a woman) most of our lives. They have known for ....seconds.
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AdamMLP

At the time I came out I was on a residential apprenticeship, similar in a way to school/college I suppose.  There were the 200 apprentices I lived with, HR/admin staff from my company, a couple of instructors from the company, as well as a contractor company who provided the instruction and residential support.

I came out to a trans woman who was an instructor for the company first off, asking for a bit of advice with who to talk to.  Then when a letter came through from my gender identity clinic without any name on the envelope and was opened by admin to find out where it was supposed to go, I panicked, and went and asked her to tell whoever she saw fit so that it didn't come out as a result of this letter, and I knew who knew and who didn't.

Me and my manager discussed how we saw best to handle this.  He told the relevant HR staff for both our company and the contractors so that they could start working out how to change their records and anything else which needed to be done first, and then we worked out what we would do with everyone else.  Neither of us were keen on doing it via email, as the main thing for me was to make sure that everyone knew at the same time, so it wasn't being passed around the rumour mill, and end up as an entirely different story by the time it got to the last person.  I suggested telling everyone in the meetings we have where everyone has to attend, which he thought was a good idea, and then I realised just how difficult that would be, and asked him to do it for me, which he was willing to do, and could see the merit in others seeing that he had my back on this.  The only other option was to go around each class and talk to them, with my manager if I wanted, but again, there would probably be rumours before I got to the last class, and I knew my nerves would be shot after the first class.

The day before the meeting the teamleaders of the instructors were told, and at lunchtime there was a meeting where the instructors were told, and explained that from the following day on I was to be treated as male.  Just before the meeting the residential support staff were told, which I found kinda funny, as they all automatically came and boxed me in incase anyone reacted badly to it.  Then it was back to the accommodation and moving out of the female rooms.  I went to McDonalds to use the toilet the first time I needed it, so that people had a few hours to get their heads around me being male before walking into me in the bathroom, but after that I used them as normal and everything was fine.

It's been just over 6 months since I came out, and I'd not change how I did it at all.  Obviously it's not going to be an option for everyone, and it was the most terrifying thing I've ever done just to sit there and hear the thing I'd tried to hide for so long, and had just cost me my family, be told to everyone else I knew.  I took my pulse just before he started his piece on me, 192 bpm, and then I took my pulse in the plane (I hate flying too) just before I did a skydive, and it was fast, but now where near as bad!

I cut off all ties with my former name as immediately as possible.  My email address was changed within a day or two, my security pass was swapped the same day just after the meeting, the HR manager very gleefully showed me that they'd made a new copy of the massive laminated list of apprentices the next day, and all the other things which slipped through the net were caught very quickly.  There was no umming and ahhing from those higher up, so my peers knew that it wasn't acceptable to do that either.  My surname is pretty uncommon though, so anyone who might have forgotten who Alex was would still recognise me easily.
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