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Some of you just read the title of this post and are now saying, “But Z, I thought your pronoun was ‘they’!”

You are correct. My pronouns are they/them/theirs. I define as gender-rich, and “they” is the pronoun that fits me best.

But other people don’t always remember this. Instead of saying “they”, they say, “she, I mean, they, sh** I’m sorry!”

It’s only natural.

For one thing, I went by “she” for a long time. It didn’t fit me for a long time, but there wasn’t a good alternative until “they” came along.

For another thing, I’m not 20 and neither are most of my friends. Most of us have had two choices, “she” or “he”, for as long as we’ve been breathing. Remembering to use “they” can take a while.

A year or so ago, Melissa and I did a Sunday morning service via livestream. The next day, I received a message from the husband of the minister. He apologized to me for using my pronouns incorrectly.

I barely remembered that he had used my pronouns incorrectly, as it happens so often. But I loved that he wrote me. And I told him so. I also told him that it wasn’t about doing it perfectly or getting it right every time. It was about trying. And connecting. And he was doing both of these things. Perfectly.

Because of that interaction, we have a closer connection. I love that he took the time to write me. I love that he had the courage to write me. I love that we were able to communicate and understand each other better.

These days, when I’m telling people about my pronouns, I often say that my pronoun is “they.” But then I add that my prounoun is also “she, I mean, they, sh** I’m sorry!”

It’s my way of saying that it’s okay to mess up. It’s okay to try and “fail.” Which is never a true fail, because the win is in the try.

As the definition of gender continues to expand and morph, there’s a lot of fear of getting it wrong.

I get it. I have that too when it comes to other people’s gender identity and expression.

But I’ll repeat here what I’ve heard said countless times:

It’s okay to ask someone what their pronouns are.

In fact, it’s more than okay. It’s awesome.

It’s not okay to ask someone you’ve just met about their body and whether they’ve had surgery or are on hormones or any other questions about their physical expression of gender. At least, not until you know that person waaaaaay better and have permission to ask such a thing.

But pronouns are a public currency. And “they” is a public currency that’s been around for a long time but is only recently making a comeback. It’s still finding its way into our minds and mouths.

Sometimes it comes out as “they.” Sometimes it comes out as “she, I mean, they, sh** I’m sorry!”

Either one is good, in my book. (My book is also a “they”, by the way. But it also answers to “she, I mean, they, sh** I’m sorry!”)

What’s your experience with pronouns? Share your experience below!

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