🐱 Stop Assuming My Gender Over Zoom

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CatParty


Over quarantine, I had a plethora of time to think, think and then think again. In my childhood bedroom, I thought about who I was and who I wanted to be. Eventually, right before the school year started, I came out as non-binary.

It felt (and still does feel) freeing to be my true, authentic identity. But school was approaching rapidly, and even asking my closest friends to use my correct pronouns was scary, let alone a bunch of people I didn’t know over Zoom.

My transition didn’t include a name change, but it did include a whole new set of pronouns (they/them). In every class, my syllabus had the mandatory statement regarding the chosen name policy, but there was nothing about respecting pronouns.

To not explicitly see in the syllabus that my pronouns would be respected should have been a warning sign, but I still had hope.

I am getting misgendered in my classes almost every day.
Some professors made it a point to teach students how to add their pronouns on Zoom. When I saw professors doing this, I was hopeful that many students would participate. Sadly, that’s not the case.

In one of my classes, my trans friend, the professor and I are some of the only folks to do it. This raises my first problem.

It is not up to trans and queer students to lead the way in making our environments accessible. It is not easy to state your pronouns when your physical appearance does not match the societal standard of who people are. By adding pronouns to their Zoom names, cisgendered students can help set an example for their other peers and eventually help normalize pronoun displays in the classroom.

Cisgendered students need to do better — and that means standing in solidarity with their trans and queer peers. Easy ways for cisgendered students to make the classroom more inclusive is by simply putting their pronouns in their Zoom name and actively correcting those who misgender others in the class — all it takes is a private message on Zoom to make sure someone is aware of others’ pronouns.

The responsibility to respect others does not end at the cisgendered students. Professors need to be held accountable, too. At the beginning of the semester, I made it a point to slap my pronouns on every “getting to know you” syllabus assignment, even when the professor didn’t ask for it. In some cases, they did ask — but flash forward to now, and I am getting misgendered in my classes almost every day.

Professors, I ask you this, What happened? Where are your notes that state my pronouns? Where is your effort?

The solution is beyond simple: Professors need to print out the attendance sheet and write everyone’s pronouns and chosen names down, regardless if they are cisgender or transgender.

Again, it’s not up to the students to teach professors how to make their classrooms inclusive; that is simply a part of the prerequisite in being a professor.

I understand that times are changing rapidly, and professors who did not grow up in the same environment as students will have a harder time adapting to these changes. However, right now, the effort to be inclusive is not enough. As we all know, learning takes time and effort and there should be zero reason that professors and students alike came into this school year unaware of how to be inclusive in the classroom— all it takes is a Google search.

It is not up to trans and queer students to lead the way in making our environments accessible. It is not easy to state your pronouns when your physical appearance does not match the societal standard of who people are.
Zoom has become a place where it’s harder to confront issues seen in the classroom. For example, my science class taught us that the sex chromosome reveals a person’s gender and not their sex.

If I had been in person, maybe it would’ve been easier to say something to my professor, but instead, I sat in my room mulling over the words I just read. Being online and not having a physical connection with students and professors makes it scarier to say these things because there’s no telling their reaction.

Zoom has now become a platform where students and professors can freely assume someone’s gender instead of simply asking. Being online, folks can’t see how I express my gender, so they assume despite not having the facts.

Gender has no limits, and basing someone’s gender off what they look like is disrespectful. If you don’t know somebody’s pronouns, just ask them.

I urge cisgendered students and professors to put in the work. Learn about trans and non-binary lives so you can be aware of these uncomfortable situations we are placed in. It is not up to trans and non-binary students to keep ourselves safe; it’s up to the Fordham community to keep us safe.
 
In this episode of "average looking woman that use "they" pronouns because she doesn't feel special enough," our author, ladies and gentlemen!

View attachment 1644743
Not surprised. The moment I saw that the article was about a "nonbinary" flipping her shit over nobody wanting to play along, I knew it was some basic white bitch.
 
It felt (and still does feel) freeing to be my true, authentic identity.

How can a vague, unstable transitory state of non-identity be 'true and authentic'? This is just an excuse to puff up with self importance and 'specialness' as a desperate attempt to compensate for being dull as dishwater and as attractive. It also gives her a justification to swan around in whatever filthy hippie clothes she wants, neglect herself or generally ignore social conventions/expectations because she's 'nonbinary and doesn't confirm to your ideas!'

Luckily for her I have the perfect non-gendered pronoun everyone should use when they meet her: asshole.
 
Explain to me how, in a medium in which you are orating to a group, you address a singular person as 'they' ? It's one thing in a classroom setting but expecting it to not cause confusion by referring to a singular person as a collective when all your students are just a group of faces on a screen in multiple different rooms?

FURTHUR. If you can 'add your pronouns' you should be able to show your name, with any logic, which means the professor and other students shouldn't have to refer to you by pronoun at all. Pronouns are almost exclusively used when speaking to some -not present- in the current conversation.
Good point. If anything the professor would be more likely to say “Fucky McFuck, can you read such-and-so passage” or “Yes, you in the blue shirt and terrible dye job”. Unless she has “nonbinary” terms for “you”, which wouldn’t surprise me,
 
Sigh.

I'll assume whatever I want about you, lady. If you decide to alter your identity, it's ABSOLUTELY on you to fix something that only you sees as a problem. Your classmates and professors didn't have any say in what YOU decided you were so it isn't their job to cushion you and validate your made-up experiences.
 
I urge cisgendered students and professors to put in the work. Learn about trans and non-binary lives so you can be aware of these uncomfortable situations we are placed in. It is not up to trans and non-binary students to keep ourselves safe; it’s up to the Fordham community to keep us safe.


LOL, no.

I used to ask the question...how do these people function in everyday life.
And that is just the problem, they don't and are not forced to do so.

I mean, where’s their paycheck for all this emotional labour on behalf of the least deserving segment of the most narcy nuisances out there? NO. The only people who want to perform free labour for you are already doing it. That should tell you something.

What this cunt really wants is the school to force everyone to put goddamn pronouns everywhere. They always want force, mandates. Nobody likes you people. Nobody wants you around. This is why. THIS. It isn’t because we haven’t learned about you. It’s because we have. Everyone. Hates. You. Because of your behavior.

Do they want ANYTHING REAL? They never ask or demand anything that isn’t just a nuisance to other people. This is America and we have a goddamn right to not give a shit about or notice your existence.
 
Eventually, right before the school year started, I came out as.... and even asking my closest friends to use my correct pronouns was scary, let alone... It is not up to trans and queer students to lead the way in.... ...cisgendered students can help set an example for their other peers and eventually help normalize pronoun displays... Cisgendered students need to do better — and that means... and actively correcting those who misgender others in the class — all it takes is... The solution is beyond simple: ...has now become a platform where students and professors can freely assume someone’s gender instead of... I urge cisgendered students and professors to put in the work. Learn about trans and non-binary lives so you can...

This isn't an article, this is just a Mad Libs™: SocJus IdPol Edition some thot filled in the blanks for. There's nothing but regurgitated buzzwords and pozzed phrases repeating, circling the drain.
 
We are some 7-8 months in this work-from-home condition in the US. Most people who are forced to do video conferencing do so in their pajamas, bathrobe, or if you’re salaried high enough, you just put on a nice shirt while your junk hangs out (hopefully) invisible from view. No one gives a single, solitary fuck about troons on video calls. Stop acting out for attention and asspats, and do your damned job.
 
As an ESL, dealing with pronouns bullshit was an absolute fucking nightmare, I defaulted to "He" for a decade, even when I was talking about women I would write "He" and not realize. Then this cunt who I have know for nearly a decade, who in my eyes was always a man, says he is now non-binary and proceeded to make every interaction with him a fucking chore since he would stop everything to correct you in the most annoying possible way for using the wrong pronoun.
It is like someone said above, if they are so sure about their identities, why do they need constant validation from others? Most, if not all, of them are attention whores plain and simple, normal people, even some transexuals, don't give two shits about pronouns because their identities aren't fragile and don't crumble the second someone perceives them the wrong way.
 
We are some 7-8 months in this work-from-home condition in the US. Most people who are forced to do video conferencing do so in their pajamas, bathrobe, or if you’re salaried high enough, you just put on a nice shirt while your junk hangs out (hopefully) invisible from view.
Or, if you're a Latin American politician, you have sex with your wife on camera as a flex.
 
We are some 7-8 months in this work-from-home condition in the US. Most people who are forced to do video conferencing do so in their pajamas, bathrobe, or if you’re salaried high enough, you just put on a nice shirt while your junk hangs out (hopefully) invisible from view. No one gives a single, solitary fuck about troons on video calls. Stop acting out for attention and asspats, and do your damned job.
“Job”. It’s a non-binary college student, The only job she’ll ever have is line-waiting at the dole plantation.
 
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