Identity 101
Pride & History
Workplace Allyship
Language & Respect
Gender-Affirming Care: Myths vs Facts
100

A person can be transgender and also be straight, gay, bisexual, etc.

Fact

Gender identity and sexual orientation are independent.

100

Pride began as a protest movement, not just a celebration.

Fact

Pride has roots in resistance and activism.

100

If you mess up pronouns, a quick correction and moving on is usually best.

Fact

Brief correction centers the other person and keeps it moving.

100

You can’t reliably “tell” someone is LGBTQ by looking.

Fact

Appearance doesn’t reliably signal identity.

100

Gender-affirming care is mostly surgery.

Myth

Often includes social support, counseling, and non-surgical care

200

Sexual orientation and gender identity are the same thing.

Myth

Orientation = who you’re attracted to; gender identity = who you are.

200

LGBTQ people have always existed; only labels have changed over time.

Fact

People existed; language and visibility changed.

200

If someone comes out to you, it’s okay to share if you mean well.

Myth

Don’t share without explicit consent.

200

It’s appropriate to ask a coworker their “real name.”

Myth

“Real name” can be invalidating; use the name given.

200

For teens, care is typically gradual and carefully evaluated.

Fact

Common framing: gradual, cautious, evaluated.

300

Nonbinary means “confused” or “undecided.”

Myth

Nonbinary is a valid identity, not indecision.

300

Stonewall is widely seen as a turning point in modern U.S. LGBTQ activism.

Fact

Stonewall is widely recognized as catalytic.

300

Avoiding LGBTQ topics entirely is the best way to be inclusive.

Myth

Inclusion isn’t silence; it’s respect + belonging.

300

If someone doesn’t correct me, I’m probably using the right pronouns.

Myth

People may not correct others for safety/fatigue reasons.

300

Kids routinely get irreversible treatments right away.

Myth

Careful, staged approaches rather than "right away".

400

Pronouns are only relevant if someone is transgender or nonbinary.

Myth

Everyone has pronouns; normalization reduces assumptions.

400

The rainbow flag was always the only Pride flag.

Myth

Multiple Pride flags/variations exist.

400

You can support LGBTQ inclusion even if you’re not LGBTQ.

Fact

Allyship is actions anyone can take.

400

Confidentiality matters: someone’s LGBTQ identity isn’t yours to share.

Fact

Outing can cause harm; privacy is essential.

400

Gender identity is a brand-new “trend.”

Myth

Gender Identity is persistent across history.

500

A person’s identity is best determined by how they look or sound.

Myth

You can’t determine identity from appearance/voice.

500

LGBTQ history is only about tragedy.

Myth

LGBTQ history includes joy, community, creativity, and progress (not only tragedy).

500

If you hear a biased comment, you only have one option: confront publicly in the moment.

Myth

Options include redirecting, asking a clarifying question, setting a boundary, or following up privately.

500

Inclusive language is a “nice-to-have,” not a workplace standard.

Myth

Inclusive language is baseline professionalism, not “extra.”

500

Gender-affirming care is completely separate from “regular” healthcare.

Myth

There is overlap with other healthcare tools such as hormones and counseling. 

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