#deadnaming
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text

#gulf of mexico#gulf of america#coolness graphed#bar charts#graphs#refusing to use a new name#dead name#deadnaming#sears tower#skyscraper#name change#infographic#charts#humor#donald trump
30K notes
·
View notes
Text




39K notes
·
View notes
Text
Deadnaming hurts ore than just the person you use it on. Caitlyn Jenner is still a disgrace to the trans community, though.
Webtoon | Insta | Bluesky
Support on Patreon!
#tiff and eve#comic strip#webcomic#newspaper comics#trans comic#transgender#trans#trans artist#cartoonist#caitlyn jenner#fuck trump#benedict arnold#deadnaming#original art#my art#illustration#art#ink
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
Hint, it wasn’t my first name I forgot how to spell.
2K notes
·
View notes
Text
shock.
this happened while i was touring an amazon facility yesterday and i have no idea why they would think to deadname me, when im certain i put my preferred name on everything. had to make a comic about it
#trans artist#transgender#artists on tumblr#lgbtq#small artist#artwork#mini comic#queer artist#comics#digital art#deadnaming#dysphoria
133 notes
·
View notes
Text
Someone on Roblox said they knew my name, said my DEADNAME instead of the name I’m comfy with and didn’t leave me alone afterwards.
444 notes
·
View notes
Text
You can look how quickly people started to call the pope by Leo XIV, but suddenly it's too hard to not deadname trans people
#trans#trans discourse#lgbt#transfeminism#lgbtq community#pope#pope leo xiv#vatican#trans people#deadnaming#christianity#nobody would call Leo XIV by Robert Francis Prevost#but when it comes to us#they always gonna call Helena by Norman (I'm sorry if you have the same deadname and name pattern)#or even sometimes going to search about the deadname of a trans person#just to call them that way
22 notes
·
View notes
Note
My parents, or at least my mom anyway, keep misgendering and deadnaming, (I don't even really consider it a deadname a part from them using it, in fact I've made it a part of my middle name but I don't want them to see that as an excuse to keep calling me it).
Anyway, she says she's "accepting", and that, if I'm not misreading her text I'm still trans regardless of whether she gets my name and pronouns right which like... yeah??? I don't know I'm conflicted, on the one hand I really don't want to be around people who don't respect me, on the other hand I feel like I should cut her slack? I get that it can be difficult to make that switch, she'd been kinda trying before, at least face-to-face, but now it just feels like she's regressing or doesn't want to make the effort anymore. Maybe I need to tell her that I appreciate her trying again? I've already told her that it's going to be difficult for me to want to be around if she can't respect me, I've been pretty low contact already and I've been thinking of maybe giving the relationship another shot but with her texting about how she's gonna keep deadnaming me..... idk I kinda feel like an asshole honestly but I also don't really want to spare her feelings anymore.
parents can be really iffy when it comes to this kind of thing.
sometimes they catch on after a while, sometimes they're never fully on board. best you can do in most situations is to tell her in the moment (or as soon as possible, while it's still fresh) that she misgendered you, used the wrong pronouns, etc. i had to confront my sister on it before she realized it was bothering me. she still deadnames me and uses the wrong pronouns, but best we can do is tell that person how it makes us feel
if she continues to do it or says that she's "trying" but never seems to make progress, then you have your answer. sometimes family pulls the the "i've known you as (deadname) for so many years!" and refuse to change. hopefully that's not the case for you. i wish you the best of luck
36 notes
·
View notes
Text
not me wanting to cry on Christmas.
my aunt (aka my mom’s friend, but we all call her our aunt) gave me a custom made blanket, but it has my deadname on it. I know the thought was there, and I don’t want to say anything, but I feel like shit rn.
will I have to stay in the closet forever… this feeling is horrible. I wish I could formally come out with my chosen name and pronouns, but I know that nobody will use them :(
30 notes
·
View notes
Text
Some Valentine's cards!
#ninjago#dragons rising#valentine's day#deadnaming#deadname#nya#sora#jordana#thunderfang#arc dragon of focus
66 notes
·
View notes
Text
Deadnaming is a microaggression.
21 notes
·
View notes
Text
#tiff and eve#comic strip#webcomic#art#my art#original art#illustration#trans comic#transgender#newspaper comics#trans#bridal shower#cookies#deadnaming#trans artist#ink
786 notes
·
View notes
Text
I desperately wish some cis people could understand that if you accidentally misgender a non-cis person, they’re probably not going to react as badly as they assume they will.
no, instead they will (rightfully) react badly if you have shown to be continuously and purposefully misgendering them. Then of course you’re going have people on your back about that, and calling you a dick, because you did a dick move by purposefully misgendering someone and calling them something they did not want to be called.
#talk away ⌞🍵🍋 ⌝#you would not call a cis person pronouns#they do not want to be referred by#why do you think it’s ok and not that big of a deal#to purposefully do that do non-cis people just because#you personally don’t get it or agree with it?#trans#trans pride#transgender#genderqueer#gender nonconforming#pronouns#gender identity#nonbinary#tw misgendering#tw deadnaming#misgendering#deadnaming#I think#queer#lgbtq+#lgbtqia#queerphobia
50 notes
·
View notes
Text
very specific reassurance post.
There’s a lot of talk around about how forgetting someone’s deadname/previous name is peak allyship. But just remember, if you’re not someone who can do that it doesn’t make you a bad person. So long as you’re only using their name/s it’s no harm no foul. This is coming from someone with repeated intrusive thoughts about deadnaming my friends to their faces. You’re doing fine. Go easy on yourself.
39 notes
·
View notes
Text
By: Colin Wright
Published: Apr 8, 2025
Earlier this year, I testified before the Colorado legislature in opposition to House Bill 25-1109, which would have required death certificates to reflect decedents’ “gender identity,” rather than their sex. The proposal was self-evidently absurd—death certificates are legal documents, not tributes to decedents’ subjective sense of self. Nevertheless, the legislature passed the bill, which awaits Governor Jared Polis’s signature.
Now, Colorado lawmakers have gone a step further. A new proposal, House Bill 25-1312, would make “deadnaming” and “misgendering” children—that is, not using their preferred name or pronouns—a factor in child-custody disputes. Under the Kelly Loving Act, parents who refuse to use their child’s chosen name or pronouns, even out of sincere concern for the child’s well-being, would be deemed to be exercising “coercive control,” and therefore liable to lose custody.
Instead of ensuring children’s safety, this bill would mandate speech, codify a radical ideology into law, and weaponize family courts to enforce compliance.
The bill is framed in terms of preventing “harm” and “abuse,” which relies on the popular claim that “gender-affirming care” is a form of suicide prevention. Despite the frequency with which such claims get repeated, no good evidence exists suggesting that “gender-affirming” treatments—social transition, puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, surgeries—are grounded in rigorous, evidence-based medicine. On the contrary, every systematic review conducted to date has concluded that the evidence supporting these interventions is of very low quality.
By insisting that parents affirm their child’s identity, the bill pushes the “social transition” aspect of “gender-affirming care,” which entails changing a child’s name, pronouns, clothing, and behavior to align with his asserted “gender identity.” Proponents often portray social transition as a benign and cost-free intervention. But as Mia Hughes, a senior researcher at Genspect, noted in her testimony before the Colorado House Committee against the proposal, “affirming” a child in his delusion sets him up for a lifetime of regret:
There are consequences to lying to a child. A parent telling their sweet effeminate boy who liked Barbies and princess gowns that he can be a girl may solve his distress in the short term. It is, after all, not easy to be different. It may seem to be in that little boy’s best interest to use the female name and female pronouns, and a court may decide that he is better off with the affirming parent. But this is short-sighted. Social transition comes at such an enormous cost in the future. . . . Socially transitioning children sets off a chain reaction that can lead to becoming a life-long medical patient. Therefore, this bill has got it backwards. Socially transitioning a child is a form of coercive control that strips away the child’s sense of self, robs them of their bodily integrity, and violates their right to go through puberty.
Hughes is exactly right.
Psychologist Kenneth Zucker, an expert in gender dysphoria, similarly warned in a 2019 paper that social transition can inappropriately cement a child’s cross-sex identity. In that paper, he predicted that social transition would “increase dramatically” the rate at which transitioned children’s gender dysphoria persisted compared with children with gender dysphoria not socially transitioned.
He was proved correct. A 2022 study by Kristina Olson and colleagues found that a shocking 97.5 percent of transgender-identifying “youth who socially transitioned at early ages continued to identify that way.” Nearly 60 percent of such children will continue on to puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones, and many will pursue surgeries. In the years before widespread social transition, by contrast, most young children with gender dysphoria—about 80 percent—eventually desisted and accepted their bodies as they grew into adulthood.
Rather than view socially transitioned children’s persistent gender dysphoria as a red flag, activists hail it as validation. Azeen Ghorayshi, writing about Olson’s study for the New York Times, said that the results reflected “societal acceptance of gender diversity” and increasingly supportive parents, both of which allow “transgender children” to “thrive in their identities.” Olson, in an interview with Healthline, argued that the persistence rate debunks the notion that “a five or six-year-old who is insisting that they are a gender that does not align with their sex at birth can’t possibly know their gender, or that this is just a ‘phase.’”
These are deeply flawed interpretations. If social transition were truly a harmless way for kids to explore their identities, we’d expect a significant number to decide eventually that they aren’t transgender, given the numbers that historically desisted when left alone. Instead, nearly all those who are socially transitioned persist in the rejection of their natal sex.
I’ve often asked supporters of gender-affirming care: If 97.5 percent persistence after social transition doesn’t concern you, what number would? I am still waiting for a response. The truth, for many activists, is that any outcome serves as proof that gender-affirming care is working.
This kind of unfalsifiable thinking is now shaping public policy. Colorado’s Kelly Loving Act defines “deadnaming” and “misgendering” as forms of “coercive control”—a term traditionally used to describe domestic abusers who isolate, intimidate, and manipulate their victims. In custody disputes, the bill orders courts to favor parents who affirm their child’s identity and to disfavor parents who don’t.
Yet skeptical parents are often the only ones who can protect their children from harmful medical treatments. Many detransitioners—people who once identified as transgender but no longer do—speak of a parent who slowed things down, asked difficult questions, and refused to affirm their recently adopted cross-sex or “nonbinary” identity. Maintaining this tether to reality provided a safe and shame-free way out.
The Kelly Loving Act would punish such parents and reward those who set their child on an irreversible path of life-long medicalization. On April 2, the bill cleared the state house’s Judiciary Committee, with all seven Democrats voting in favor, and all four Republicans in opposition. On April 6, it passed the full state house with overwhelming Democratic support. It now moves to the state senate, where Democrats hold a 23-12 edge. If the bill clears the senate, it will land on the desk of Governor Polis, who has signed similar legislation simplifying the process for changing sex on IDs and banning so-called “conversion therapy” with respect to “gender identity,” which prevents gender clinicians from questioning patients’ transgender identity and trying to make them comfortable in their natural bodies.
If Polis signs the bill, Colorado will enshrine into law the notion that protecting a child from irreversible and unnecessary medical treatments constitutes abuse. This is precisely the opposite of the truth. Kids with gender dysphoria—and the parents who refuse to lie to them—deserve better.
--
Abstract
A gender social transition in prepubertal children is a form of psychosocial treatment that aims to reduce gender dysphoria, but with the likely consequence of subsequent (lifelong) biomedical treatments as well (gender-affirming hormonal treatment and surgery). Gender social transition of prepubertal children will increase dramatically the rate of gender dysphoria persistence when compared to follow-up studies of children with gender dysphoria who did not receive this type of psychosocial intervention and, oddly enough, might be characterized as iatrogenic. Parents who bring their children for clinical care hold different philosophical views on what is the best way to help reduce the gender dysphoria, which require both respect and understanding.
==
Compelled speech is a form of coercive control by an abusive party.
Radical genderists: "They're just pronouns, what's the big deal?" Also radical genderists: "Pronouns are such a big deal we made a statewide law to call parents abusers if they don't use them."
#Colin Wright#Kelly Loving Act#coercive control#compelled speech#misgendering#misgender#pronouns#pronoun culture#deadnaming#deadname#authoritarianism#religion is a mental illness
8 notes
·
View notes