Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know little kids don't know better, but in large gatherings when they have no filter it can be extremely awkward if I'm misgendered. How should I handle this?
"oh hey I'm Mr Jones actually!" or "oh I'm just Jones, no Mr or Mrs!"
Kids will be like "ok" and move along. Kids don't care, only adults do. I say, you do you and don't be afraid to just be politely like "oh my words are she/her!" or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know little kids don't know better, but in large gatherings when they have no filter it can be extremely awkward if I'm misgendered. How should I handle this?
"oh hey I'm Mr Jones actually!" or "oh I'm just Jones, no Mr or Mrs!"
Kids will be like "ok" and move along. Kids don't care, only adults do. I say, you do you and don't be afraid to just be politely like "oh my words are she/her!" or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know little kids don't know better, but in large gatherings when they have no filter it can be extremely awkward if I'm misgendered. How should I handle this?
As soon as they’re old enough to speak they’re old enough to be corrected. You can either delicately (on not, that’s how I deal with older kids) tell them the difference. If by 5 they are wrong it’s due to their parents pushing down outdated, harmful messaging and the kids deserve enlightenment.
Anonymous wrote:I know little kids don't know better, but in large gatherings when they have no filter it can be extremely awkward if I'm misgendered. How should I handle this?
Anonymous wrote:I know little kids don't know better, but in large gatherings when they have no filter it can be extremely awkward if I'm misgendered. How should I handle this?