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How to come out at work, about anything

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    - Coming out.
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    Typically we think of this
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    as being an experience specific
    to the queer community.
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    But we all have things that
    we're keeping in our closets.
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    It could be something about
    our home and family life,
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    something about our
    mental or physical health.
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    Maybe you're not allergic to
    cats you just don't like them.
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    I feel you on that one.
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    Whatever it is that you're
    keeping in your closet,
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    inevitably it shapes the
    way you navigate the world.
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    And that can include your work life.
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    So how do we go about
    disclosing these important,
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    but sometimes difficult to talk
    about aspects of who we are.
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    And when someone comes out to us,
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    what can we bust do to
    listen and support them?
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    Hi, my name's Micah.
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    But it hasn't always been.
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    After a year at my current place of work,
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    I started the process
    of coming out as trans.
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    When I sat down with human
    resources to talk about
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    how to reintroduce myself to everybody,
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    neither of us had answers.
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    Nobody at my place of work
    had come out as trans before,
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    but that's what I'm here to offer you.
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    Three tips on how to talk about
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    things that are hard to talk about.
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    And for those of you on the
    other side of the conversation,
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    I have some advice for you too,
    on how you can best listen,
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    respond and be an active
    ally for your colleague.
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    I can't give you the exact words to say
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    because they should be your own.
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    After all I don't know what
    you're keeping in your closet.
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    But whatever it might be,
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    I hope these tips will
    provide you with a framework
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    that's going to help you decide
    exactly what you wanna say
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    and how you wanna say it.
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    Know what you want and don't
    want out of the conversation.
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    To know this, ask yourself questions like,
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    do I need anything
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    from the person that
    I'm disclosing this to?
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    Where do I want the
    conversation to go from here,
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    if anywhere at all?
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    And how do I want this person
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    to understand my own relationship
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    with this aspect of who I am?
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    So, in my case, I knew I
    wanted people to call me
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    by my new name and pronouns.
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    But I also didn't want them to avoid me
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    out of fear of messing them up.
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    This was going to take time.
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    And I wanted this to feel
    like any other ordinary fact
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    about who I am.
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    So now we know what we wanna communicate.
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    Let's talk about how
    we're going to say it.
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    By setting the tone.
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    You're going to want to
    present the information
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    in the same way you want
    people to respond to it.
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    They're going to be looking
    and listening for cues
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    on what the appropriate response is.
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    Is this something that
    you want to be celebrated?
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    I'm trans!
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    Or do you want to just address it
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    and move on with your life?
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    Oh, by the way, I'm trans.
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    There's no one right way
    to say it for everybody.
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    What's most important here
    is what's right for you.
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    Another note,
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    we're not going to be
    able to control the way
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    in which everybody responds to this.
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    But what we do have control over
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    is how they understand
    our own relationship
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    with this part of who we are.
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    So now that we know what we wanna say
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    and how we wanna say it,
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    where do we want the
    conversation to go from here?
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    Well, my advice is to give an action item.
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    This will help you keep
    control of the conversation
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    by giving people direction
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    on what they're supposed
    to do or say next.
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    I knew I wanted this to feel like
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    any other ordinary fact about who I am.
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    So I decided I was going
    to use my coming out
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    to solve an ordinary problem.
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    And I sent the following email.
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    Hello all, I need your help.
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    I am in the market for moisturizer
    to help with my dry skin.
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    I'm also in the process of out as trans.
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    I'm changing my name to Micah
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    and my pronouns are he, him, his.
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    If you have any questions
    about my change in pronouns
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    or my skincare needs,
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    feel free to send an email
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    to my updated contact information.
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    And I'd also like to note
    that when my skin is dry,
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    it is not too sensitive.
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    We're all going to mess up
    my name and my pronouns,
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    myself included.
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    So when this happens,
    don't panic or crunch.
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    Please be kind to yourself,
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    as we stumble through these
    growing pains together.
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    I'm fortunate and grateful
    to work in a place
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    where I feel embraced in any form.
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    Be it as a transgender man
    or a person with dry skin
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    or in this case, both.
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    Now, I'm gonna be honest.
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    I haven't made many changes
    to my skin care routine
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    since sending this email.
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    But I will say that I am
    feeling much more comfortable
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    in my own skin.
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    And that's what thanks
    to responses like these.
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    (soft music)
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    Now you might be wondering
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    if I'm the listener in this conversation,
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    what can I best do to support my colleague
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    other than maybe referring
    them to my dermatologist?
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    Well, for starters, listen
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    with an open heart and an empathetic ear.
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    You're especially going
    to want to listen here
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    for this specific language
    the person is using
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    to describe themselves
    and their experience
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    because that's the same language
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    you're going to wanna use back to them.
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    You might be tempted to ask
    your coworkers some questions
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    about their identity.
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    Before you ask them a question,
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    ask yourself,
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    can I find the answer to
    this in a search engine?
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    Chances are the answer is yes.
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    And if the answer is no, ask yourself,
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    is this too personal of a question
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    for me to be asking my colleague.
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    One question that is okay to ask though,
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    is there anything I can do
    to support you at this time?
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    This is a note for if you're responding
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    in the moment and in person.
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    But if you want to be an active ally,
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    the conversation doesn't end here,
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    it picks up again with your
    colleagues and human resources
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    on how you can make your
    workplace more inclusive
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    of this person's identity.
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    Chances are it's not
    just going to help them,
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    but maybe someone else down the line.
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    Now, in my case,
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    it would be adding pronouns
    to your email signature
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    and asking your coworkers to do the same
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    in order to help normalize
    it across the org.
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    You could also be talking to HR
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    about having more trans
    inclusive healthcare policies.
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    And my last piece of advice
    is for both the listener
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    and the leader in the conversation.
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    Remember that they're the same person
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    you've always known them to be.
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    It's the weight of stereotypes and stigmas
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    that often keep our closet doors shut.
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    We're afraid people are now
    gonna see us as this thing
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    instead of seeing this thing
    as an aspect of who we are,
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    of we've always been.
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    I know that was the case for me too,
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    but it got easier for me
    to say my name is Micah
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    because of the way I saw
    it not only accepted,
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    but enthusiastically embraced
    by all of my coworkers.
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    So whatever it is you're
    keeping in your closet,
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    I hope these tips empower you
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    to bring your authentic
    self into your workplace
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    and hopefully feel more
    comfortable in your own skin.
Title:
How to come out at work, about anything
Speaker:
Micah Eames
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:04

English subtitles

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