I’ve seen a few posts recently calling people out for using “they” when referring to someone with gendered or neo pronouns.

As a long time dumb guy I was under the impression that gender neutral pronouns were basically always acceptable and I’m now concerned that I have been unintentionally making people uncomfortable.

My current understanding based on context is that once someone has made their pronouns known, unless specifically included, ‘they’ is no longer acceptable. Thank you in advance for taking the time to help me out

  • context [fae/faer, fae/faer]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    right, if i don’t know your pronouns then i’ll use “they/them” as a non-gendered option. but if i continued to refer to you, acute_engles, using they/them pronouns when you’ve already made it perfectly clear that you prefer he/him pronouns, then i would be deliberately misgendering you.

    • christian [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Cis privilege here but when I see this happen to hexbear users I give the benefit of the doubt until they blow their chance to apologize. I have no argument against what you’re saying, and I think there’s almost zero chance I could make this mistake in real life, but I feel like I’m bound to mess that up on here at some point because I’m still really awful with only reading post content and basically ignoring the usernames. I’m here a bit, but I don’t spend anywhere near as much time posting online as I did 10-20 years ago and I can easily see myself slipping back to the habit where everyone is ungendered until their post content makes it clear.

      • context [fae/faer, fae/faer]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        until they blow their chance to apologize

        yeah if someone makes a mistake, the right move is to apologize, try to do better, and move on. people make mistakes, it’s okay. my brother in christ, we’re all sinners.

  • Dyno [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    In my own anecdotal experience, some people, consciously or otherwise, will continue to refer to trans people as ‘they’ after it’s been made apparent what their identity is.
    It could be inferred that they’re uncomfortable with stating a trans person’s identified gender because they don’t ‘believe it’, which implies their usage of they/them is not simply being overly cautious or polite but because they don’t want to acknowledge said identity.
    This would also apply to people using neopronouns too - refusing to use them essentially implies that you don’t believe in them and don’t acknowledge that person’s right to determine their own identity.

  • kristina [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    I do it for everyone, even cissies, because my brain is small but if you know someone personally or see their pronouns clearly displayed it’s transphobic to not use them and be adamant about it. If you say they/them and they correct you just say sorry correct it and keep going

    • somename [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Yeah a lot of times I fallback to they/them, because I’m lazy and a dum dum, but for people who have marked/known pronouns the effort should be made.

  • LeylaLove [she/her, love/loves]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    It’s only transphobic if you have someone purposefully using they instead of someone’s preferred pronouns. Like they say as if they’re confused at your gender even after you told them. This is a small enough language thing that if it only happens every once and a while it’s barely noticeable, but if someone is using they in a transphobic way, it’s easy to tell

  • lapis [fae/faer, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    I generally default to they/them for anyone until they explicitly tell me their pronouns or somebody else who knows them uses specific pronouns for them. I personally think people shouldn’t instantly jump to accusations of transphobia when another person defaults to gender neutral pronouns – the whole point is to not assume anyone’s gender until informed otherwise.

    • MechanizedPossum [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Anyone who says this practice is transphobic is just being ridiculous

      Who is saying that, tho? From my experience, the issue is always brought up when people use they / them in a context where they know it’s misgendering somebody. And when i see that or when i’m bringing this up myself, the initial complaint is never “you’re being a transphobe here”, the complaint is always just “this person is using she / her and not they / them, can you please correct your post?” Unintentional misgendering is still misgendering and should always be corrected, even if you know the misgendered person is never going to see it. And if the misgendering was a perfectly understandable accident or not doesn’t matter, either. When i know somebody’s pronouns and see that they’re not being used, i will bring that up. But why would i call people transphobes at that point, like who even does that?

      Accusations of transphobia only enter the picture when people are being dicks about this. Which, unfortunately, happens a lot. Some people just prefer to enter full debate dingdong mode until they get banned instead of just hitting the edit button, correcting a mistake that can and does happen to everyody and saying sorry. Unfortunately, i’ve been part of such discussions on a fairly regular basis. And honestly, when people place their insistence that they cannot make a mistake towards a trans person over treating that person with respect, yeah, that reeks of transphobia to me, there’s no way around that. That’s just a cis person telling us when we’re allowed to be offended and when we’re supposed to stay quiet and remember where our place is.

      That’s all there is to this and i’ve literally not once seen somebody say that they / them for unspecified people, for groups, for people you can’t know the pronouns of would be transphobic. And i’m saying this as somebody who is a hardliner on this question and thinks it’s reasonable to either avoid pronouns entirely or to have people look up pronouns before writing about somebody. But that’s just my highly subjective opinion about which ways to adress somebody we perceive to be the most inclusive. Gender neutral language by necessity is a part of that, but so is gender affirming language.

      • lapis [fae/faer, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        I’ve literally seen both Hexbear and Blåhaj Lemmy users go straight to calling someone a transphobe because they didn’t see a user’s pronouns due to their Lemmy app or instance not showing pronouns by default (I actually only found one Lemmy app on iOS that even had a toggle for showing pronouns awhile back when I was picking a client, which is a shame).

        Back when I was on reddit, I also saw a decent number of trans people complaining there about being referred to with they/them by somebody irl when their gendered pronouns had not been expressed in any way. Like I understand that degendering is a problem, and it’s harmful asf, but I don’t think it’s right to assume that anybody using a gender-neutral default pronoun set is degendering a person.

        • MechanizedPossum [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Fair enough, but in the first example, it’s perfectly understandable why people would be under the assumption that their pronouns would be visibly on display and somebody not using them would purposefully misgender the user. I still remember how in the first days of federation, some guy would accuse us of being Russian bots because his replies had people with he /him, she / her, they / them and comrade / them as pronouns and that amount of “gender diversity” already was so overwhelming to him that his assumption was that we had randomly assigned pronouns for our bot army. The early days of federation weren’t exactly a relaxed time for trans people on this site, we had dunk threads about somebody accusing us all of being fake trans on a fairly regular basis. When your experience with the rest of lemmy are things like that, it’s 100% reasonable to think that somebody using they / them instead of she / her is doing that on purpose and not due to simple technical difficulties. How much benefit of the doubt are you demanding from people in a situation like that? I’m not saying that this isn’t something that causes avoidable confrontations and can be a bad look, but i am definitely arguing that it’s unfair to blame trans people in that situation for lashing out. Hurt people act mean, it is how it is. When you want our community to act more agreeable, you first need to provide an environment that doesn’t constantly shit on them, simple as.

          And don’t even get me started on the cesspool that’s reddit. Being thin-skinned and prone to jump to conclusions is a state of mind that site just gets you into as a trans person, i doubt i have to tell you that. It’s part of why i do not use it anymore, reddit had actual “i have to talk to my therapist about this” consequences on my mental health and i didn’t even wade that far outside of the trans boards after coming out. I’m not kidding, back then i was forced to attend gender counceling as part of the medical gatekeeping for gender affirming care in my country and talking about reddit-induced detorioration of my mental health was one of the few actual uses i got out of that. Turns out i also wasn’t alone with these problems, either (although my therapist had the most problem with trans 4chan users in her practice for fairly obvious reasons). Being too online in a chronically lowkey invalidating environment really, really fucks with people even before we account for the outright hostility, the targeted harassment, the chasers creeping into our DMs or the people falsely reporting us for suicide risks. And logging off is something a lot of us have to actively work on due to these sites being literally designed to habituate you and keep you permanently online. It’s honestly kinda mean to call it “ridiculous” when trans people in an environment like that overreact to something that, while unintended, is still objectively very hurtful from that person’s perspective. I mean, yes, i agree, it’s an overreaction, it is uncalled for from the other person’s perspective, but come on. We both know how people get into such a headspace, and honestly, it’s not the trans person’s fault.

          • lapis [fae/faer, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            I still remember how in the first days of federation

            This is fair, I forget how… not good it was back then. But I think at this point it’s reasonable to expect Hexbear users commenting outside Hexbear to realize pronoun display isn’t a given.

            And don’t even get me started on the cesspool that’s reddit.

            I’m so, so glad I’m not there on the regular anymore – it’s strictly for periodic research lookups nowadays, and I try to not even use it for that except when absolutely necessary.

            It’s honestly kinda mean to call it “ridiculous” when trans people in an environment like that overreact to something that, while unintended, is still objectively very hurtful from that person’s perspective.

            I think I’m just too compartmentalized to understand this. I don’t really take psychic damage from people mis-assuming my gender, so long as they change tracks when I correct them. But will edit my phrasing to be less potentially-hurtful, my bad there.

  • companero [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    If you normally assume people’s pronouns based on appearance, then use they/them when you’re “not sure”, you could be effectively hinting to them that they aren’t passing, which can obviously be hurtful.

    • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      But using the explicitly wrong pronouns would also seem to be hurtful.

      And shy of asking everyone their pronouns - which often feels invasive - a generic pronoun seems the most polite option until it’s clear one way or another.

      • TBooneChickens [they/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        The important distinction is what it means for it to “be clear”. Unless someone has indicated what their pronouns are, using they/them for everyone is the polite option. But if you’re using he/him for strangers just because they’re “clearly a cis man”, you’re now imposing a transphobic bias on those whom you use they/them

        • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          But if you’re using he/him for strangers just because they’re “clearly a cis man”

          Right, but OP was saying they’re using They/Them in cases of ambiguity and getting called out for it

      • MechanizedPossum [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        The problem here is that they / them is only generic to people who speak English as a first language. In my first language, it’s a neopronoun, one that you’ll see being used if you know a lot of nonbinary people, but that’s a good deal less common than several local neopronouns. And none of these neopronouns are so common that they would come off as gender neutral, all of them will come off as “i’m assuming that person has some heavy gender thing going on”. Now, that’s something that literally goes for almost everybody i hang out with, but still, none of all the genderdiverse people i know use a gender neutral default pronoun for others, not even the majority that at least sometimes uses neopronouns for themselves, not even the ones that are the most into gender abolition.

        It’s just not a thing we do around here, firstly because neopronouns are so personal and specific here, secondly because our neutral option is “none / use name”. And when we don’t know the name, we use neutral descriptors like “that person.” And that option works just as well in English, so i seriously encourage making more use of it when we’re still in a phase were all of this is in flux.

    • MechanizedPossum [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Yeah, that’s definitely the impression i’d be getting in that situation, but that situation isn’t exactly ideal to begin with. I know that there’s edge cases like people who are questioning or closeted, which make practices like pronoun circles tricky for those people because that either forces a premature outing or a self-misgendering on someone. There’s really no ideal solution that will cover all cases. But as a rule of thumb, i think we should just normalize stating your pronouns without making that something that feels coercive, and if that falls flat for some reason, i prefer pronoun avoidance over they / them, because that actually is a neutral option.

  • Tommasi [she/her, pup/pup's]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    There are definitely people who use “they” about trans people as a way to be transphobic without seeming as hostile as if they were more explicitly misgendering them.

    If done non-maliciously, and you’re not singling out just trans or gender non-conforming people, most people won’t mind, but it’s definitely better to use their preferred ones if you know, just so people don’t think you’re doing that.

  • radiofreeval [any]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    Using they as a default for people who’s pronouns are known (and not they) is misgendering. For example, I’m a she, not a they or he.

  • Kaplya@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    I have asked this a few times but never got an answer: what if I forget your pronouns and have to refer to you in third person to other people and you’re not around to remind me?

    I have many students and sorry I will inevitably forget names and pronouns, it happens.

    • OhNoMoreLemmy@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      So off the internet, transpeople are pretty forgiving and recognize that everyone fucks up occasionally. Transpeople misgender each other, but you know shit happens, they correct themselves and move on. If you don’t know the right pronouns you can just acknowledge it, and it’s basically fine.

      Systematically getting it wrong and failing to correct or acknowledge your mistakes is a problem though. Depending where you are, purposely and persistently misgendering someone can be seen as harassment. Even if it’s not harassment in your jurisdiction, it’s a dick move, and you should just try not to be a dick.

      On the internet, on the other hand, you get it wrong once, and someone will stop by to tell you you’re committing a hate crime. That’s just the cost of being online.