Quote from: Angela Drakken on January 15, 2018, 06:31:01 PM
You're out on your day to day business and some random walks up to you and asks POLITELY 'hello what are your pronouns? cause Im not sure.' (That to me is a little insulting.) Its slightly different when youre in an HR meeting and people are getting this sorted for you but for someone to walk up to somebody in their day to day and ASK what their pronouns are is both outing someone as trans, and or suggesting they dont pass.
Anyone else living in moderate stealth will probably agree with me.
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If complete stranger walks up to me on the street and says, "Pardon me, but I was wondering which pronouns you use...", this is already a breach of etiquette on a number of standards. Using such an example to make a case is a well-known logical fallacy:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductio_ad_absurdumPut aside, for the moment, the ridiculous case about which there is little disagreement. Instead, picture a conversation in your daily goings on that involves, at a bare minimum, the exchange of names. A person who asks in this context may be puffing up to give the appearance of enlightenment to those around, but in my experience, when I have actually been asked the question, it has been in one of two specific contexts:
1) A transgender or LGBT gathering where personal introductions often involve everybody stating their name, how they would like to be addressed (e.g. Dr. So-and-so
vs. Renae), and what pronouns they prefer.
2) A genuine request for information out of respect.
The first is common to the point of being a standard opening in transgender meetings. Hell, one of the teachers in our local high school who is very supportive of the Gay/Straight Alliance and LGBT folk in general, begins her first day of the school year by saying, "My name is Mary Smith (name altered). You may call me Mrs. Smith. My pronouns are she/her/hers." Anyone who gets together with other transfolk to socialize or for support has almost certainly encountered this first situation.
The second occurs when a conversation needs to occur, and the person isn't 100% sure what I want because of some subconscious or minimally conscious tension in their thinking involving gender cues. Perhaps my voice isn't quite right, or my skeletal proportions are saying "not female" even while my gender expression usually makes my preferences fairly obvious. The person wants a little more clarity before the conversation continues. I am happy to provide it.
I have
never personally had a totally random person get up in my space and ask me the same question. If they did, I would ask them to kindly back off, and if they did not, I would consider my defensive options, just as I would for any other creeper. If the person from situation #2 continued with prying questions about my transitional choices, I would unkindly ask them to back off. This just doesn't really happen in real life.
Whether it is right or wrong, we encounter people in our lives as clearly male or female most of the time. When we don't know, we tend to get uncomfortable. There is likely some component of evolutionary advantage to the psychology of making a male/female designation quickly and accurately as possible. Here is how I know that the question is both important and usually not judgment prone: Kids ask it.
In my profession, I often encounter young children with their parents. The pace of the ER is quick and I launch in, make my introductions, and try to get down to business. Most often, it is a 4-8 year old female who asks, "Are you a boy or a girl." The parents usually try to shush them or rapidly change the topic. I crouch down to eye level and say, "I'm a girl." Sometimes that settles the matter in the child's mind. The most common follow up from the kid is "You're really tall." I smile and say, "Yes, I am." It never goes beyond that. My height (6'2") may not be the only reason the child could not gender me correctly, but it is the only one she can articulate. There is no judgment whatsoever in the question. The child is simply confused. Once the matter is settled in her mind, she's usually as happen as a bug in a sugar jar.
Despite our best intentions, adults get confused sometimes too. You say you prefer to be misgendered. In any such case, you have been already been "clocked", or whatever other overly dramatic word you use to mean, "recognized as gender variant." Your preference for this over an almost always honest inquiry (100% in my personal experience) only makes sense in the context of your stealth.
It can be broken down into possibilities:
1. Was the person being respectful? Be respectful back, and this is important:
Don't judge them.
2. Was the person prying? I've never personally seen it, but tell them to get lost.
3. Were you so eager to get off the subject of being transgender that you ascribed rudeness to a person who was just trying to function well with you socially?
I'll leave it there, except to add that I've never been wounded by someone asking my pronouns, and at times and in seasons I can be fairly easily wounded. On the flip side, I know plenty of people who have been driven utterly neurotic by their stealth.