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| #Post#: 70649-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disrespe | |
| ctful | |
| By: Isisnin Date: October 5, 2021, 8:57 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I've been dealing with how people call me at work and the issue | |
| doesn't go away. I want to be called by the name my parents gave | |
| me (technically it's not my legal name, but my nickname. It is | |
| the nickname my parents choose for me and the one I introduce | |
| myself by.). | |
| I've been working in this city at workplaces with diverse work | |
| forces for over 40 years. It hasn't been an issue in those | |
| places nor was an issue at my current workplace until a few | |
| months ago (I've been there 8 years). Co-workers started calling | |
| me "Miss Isisnin". I'd ask to be called Isisnin. They'd ask why. | |
| I'd explain that Isisnin is the name my parents gave me and I | |
| like it. But it didn't stop. I was so frustrated I started being | |
| a bit snippy: | |
| Me: "Please call me Isisnin." | |
| Them: "Why?" | |
| Me: "It's the name my parents gave me." | |
| Them: "But Miss a form of respect." | |
| Me: "Thank you. But I prefer to be called by my name - | |
| Isisnin." | |
| Them: "But that's what we do in the South and Patti is called | |
| "Ms. Patti" (FYI, she isn't all the time. Often he's just called | |
| Patti) | |
| Me" "She's ok with it and she's from the South. I'm not ok | |
| with it and I'm from here, Boston. Call me Isisnin." | |
| or | |
| Them: "Why don't you like to be called Miss Isisnin?" | |
| Me: "Because it's not my name. Isisnin is the name my | |
| parents gave me. I love and respect them. Please call me by the | |
| name my parents gave me - Isisnin." | |
| Them: confused look and shake of their head as if I'm odd | |
| Once the questioning of me was getting so long I said, "I'd give | |
| you my parents' phone number so you could ask them why they | |
| named me Isisnin - but they're dead." | |
| Similarly, I also don't like being called "honey" or "hun". When | |
| a new assistant manager called me "hun" recently, I snapped | |
| "don't call me that! Call me Isisnin!". A couple days later, the | |
| manager "casually" explained to me that calling people "honey" | |
| or "hun" is cultural andwe should be accepting of other cultures | |
| (Paraphrasing). Then the store manager said "I sometimes call | |
| people hun". Shortly thereafter she called a couple customers | |
| hun. Never heard her do that before or since. | |
| As I write this, it occurs to me that if this keeps up, I should | |
| call corporate HR. If the manager calls HR first and claims I'm | |
| not culturally tolerant, I'm screwed. The first person to | |
| complain is the first person to be believed. FYI, the new | |
| assistant manager is of Polish descent and I'm of Irish/Austrian | |
| descent. | |
| Interestingly, a co-worker who worked in the | |
| hospice/hospital/nursing home industry, told me that at their | |
| orientation the new employees were told to not call patients | |
| "Miss ...." or "honey", "hun" etc. as it is patronizing. | |
| Today, someone who had been calling me "Isisnin" for months now | |
| called me "Miss Isisnin" twice. I didn't say anything, but need | |
| and want to. Can anyone think of any other way I can ask her to | |
| call me Isisnin without having to get into lengthy | |
| justification? And we're gearing up hiring for the holidays, so | |
| this is bound to come up again. | |
| FYI, writing this made me realize something else too. We have a | |
| new hire who identifies as the gender opposite of what they were | |
| born. They have also chosen to go by a name different than the | |
| one they were given at birth (which everyone knows as that is | |
| the name on the schedule). We have been instructed to call them | |
| by the pronoun of their chosen gender and call them by their | |
| chosen name. Which is wonderful. The manager actually checked | |
| with me that my legal name is on my paycheck since my | |
| chosen/nickname is on the schedule. HR said that wasn't possible | |
| and the manager is using my name(s) as the example that it is | |
| possible for the schedule to have the new hire's chosen name on | |
| it. So there is a store respect for an individual prefers to be | |
| called. | |
| #Post#: 70650-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: Mrs Rat Date: October 6, 2021, 2:22 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| How bloody frustrating! They're saying it's a respect thing | |
| while not respecting your wishes. Do as I say, not as I do. What | |
| a bunch of hypocrites! Is it possible to ignore them until they | |
| address you by the correct name? | |
| I went out of my way to avoid a petrol station years ago because | |
| the guy behind the counter called me love. | |
| #Post#: 70651-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: DaDancingPsych Date: October 6, 2021, 5:40 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It sounds less like they aren't refusing to call you by the name | |
| you prefer and more like they are adding the "Miss" title. I do | |
| think that it is meant to be a sign of respect and it sounds | |
| like your office has suddenly started adopting it. Is everyone | |
| getting such a title? Either way, it's not in your preference. | |
| I would take your parents out of it. It's not that they named | |
| you Isisnin, because everyone is still using this name. It's | |
| that they are adding an unwanted title. I might try to take the | |
| focus away from your parents (which might be confusing) and on | |
| the title. | |
| I would probably also confide in a few trusted coworkers. I | |
| would explain my preferred name and see if they would help me | |
| out by using it. By changing their habits, others may follow. | |
| Plus, they may help correct others. | |
| #Post#: 70652-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: Rose Red Date: October 6, 2021, 6:43 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| If you can get away with being blunt: | |
| "The respectful thing is honoring my preference and you are | |
| not." | |
| "No, you are not being respectful when you refuse to call me | |
| Isisnin. I ask you once again to stop calling me Miss Isisnin. I | |
| will no longer respond to anything except Isisnin." | |
| And I agree to leave your parents out of it. Keep it simple. | |
| It's what you prefer that matters. | |
| "Call me Isisnin" | |
| "Why?" | |
| "Because that's my name and that's what I want to be called." | |
| "But "Miss" is a sign of respect" | |
| "Respect means calling me what I want to be called and you are | |
| not respecting me" | |
| #Post#: 70653-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: oogyda Date: October 6, 2021, 7:08 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Don't enter into a lengthy justification. | |
| Calling you "Miss", "Honey", "Hun" in the workplace IS | |
| patronizing, demeaning and grounds for a report to HR and that | |
| is the ONLY explanation you should give. | |
| Then follow through....report it to HR. | |
| Point out that they have set precedence for referring to people | |
| by their preferred name/gender. | |
| #Post#: 70655-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: Hmmm Date: October 6, 2021, 8:47 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Would you clarify? Are they using Issinin, which is the nickname | |
| your parent's gave you and the name you prefer but adding the | |
| "Miss" to it? | |
| Because saying that you want them to use your preferred name | |
| because that is the one your parents gave you would confuse me | |
| because they are using that name. Going off on a tangent about | |
| Issinin being the name you want because love and respect them | |
| would have me shaking my head too and wondering what that has to | |
| do with adding a "Miss". | |
| Did the adding of Miss start when a new co-worker joined the | |
| organization? Or what changed over the last couple of months | |
| since this is new after 8 years? | |
| I think you should instead explain clearly to the manage and | |
| assistant manager why you do not like having the Miss used with | |
| your first name. | |
| On the hun and honey issue.... unless that is a consistent way | |
| they address you, I'd let the occasional hun or honey slide off | |
| my back. In close working relationships, they sometime just slip | |
| out. | |
| #Post#: 70657-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: Luci Date: October 6, 2021, 9:28 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I usually go with the cultural norms of where I am. I got over | |
| the use of my first name by strangers, the use of Ms. instead of | |
| Mrs., but still balk at Luc instead Luci but don�t make a big | |
| deal about it. I am acknowledged and identified. Honey, Sweetie | |
| and Darling are just accepted as Hey You. I don�t use any of | |
| these terms myself. I certainly prefer Miss Luci or Mirs. Smith | |
| for me, | |
| I wouldn�t beat my head against the wall, but just go on with my | |
| life. I am very sad you are unhappy with the situation. | |
| #Post#: 70658-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: DaDancingPsych Date: October 6, 2021, 9:57 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I understand the dislike for honey and sweetie. However, I | |
| always look at intent. I find in a majority of the cases that it | |
| is not meant to be disrespectful. I may still gently correct the | |
| person. Sometimes it is used when they don't know my name. | |
| Sometimes it's a habit. And sometimes they do think that they | |
| are being cute/kind. But I try not to let it rattle me too much. | |
| #Post#: 70659-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: Isisnin Date: October 6, 2021, 10:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Mrs Rat link=topic=2180.msg70650#msg70650 | |
| date=1633504946] | |
| How bloody frustrating! They're saying it's a respect thing | |
| while not respecting your wishes. Do as I say, not as I do. What | |
| a bunch of hypocrites! Is it possible to ignore them until they | |
| address you by the correct name? | |
| I went out of my way to avoid a petrol station years ago because | |
| the guy behind the counter called me love. | |
| [/quote] | |
| "bloody frustrating!" describes the situation perfectly! Thank | |
| you for that! | |
| The issue is people prefacing my name with "Miss". So instead of | |
| calling me Isisnin they call me"Miss Isisnin". | |
| This situation is recently occurring after me being there for | |
| years. May be because I was promoted to a supervisory position | |
| like Patti's. But then there are others in that supervisory too | |
| who aren't called "Miss.." (or "Mr.."). This discussion is | |
| making me realize that I have only heard Patti called "Miss | |
| Patti", I have never heard any of the other supervisors called | |
| "Miss firstName" (or "Mr FirstName"). Patti has been there for | |
| decades, well predating me. So why she is called "Miss Patti", | |
| but not all the time, is lost in history. | |
| I have talked to trusted coworkers about the situation. One of | |
| them was the one who told me about how the health care facility | |
| she worked for instructs employees not to call patients | |
| "Miss..." "hun", etc. I haven't specifically told them to | |
| ask/remind people to call me only by my name. I would think they | |
| are anyways. | |
| I only explain that Isisnin is the name my parents gave me when | |
| someone asks me why I prefer to be called Isisnin. So it's not | |
| really a tangent. It's a direct, honest answer to the question. | |
| But yeah, ya'll are right I shouldn't get into that and it would | |
| be ok to answer "Why? it's a form of respect." with answers like | |
| Rosered's. | |
| It was only that one time with the new assistant manager that I | |
| was called "hun". "hun" and "honey" is pretty new to the store | |
| and it's mostly from one newish hire (who has never called me | |
| that, but does call others that, including customers). I don't | |
| think it's due to her culture. We have many employees of that | |
| same culture and they don't call people "hun" or "honey". | |
| Thank you for all your ideas and perspectives. | |
| #Post#: 70663-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Asking people to call me by my name rude and culturally disr | |
| espectful | |
| By: NFPwife Date: October 6, 2021, 12:49 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I think you're landing at a solution, I'll just add that I think | |
| it's easier and more concise to tell people what to do instead | |
| of what not to do. If they add an honorific that you don't want | |
| say, "Please call me Isisnin." If they launch into a defense of | |
| why they're using an honorific, avoid the counter argument and | |
| say, "My preference, as stated, is Isisnin, I'll thank you for | |
| using it now and in the future." Any JADEing leaves this open to | |
| debate, discussion, and them thinking they can convince you to | |
| "go with it." | |
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