lgbtq-affirmation

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Deep, structural LGBTQ+ affirmation for communities of care. This skill moves beyond performative inclusion to genuine cultural and structural support — what it means to truly affirm LGBTQ+ members, how to respond to disclosure, what to do when identity shifts mid-life, how to navigate family rejection, how to support queer families and children, and how to hold disagreement without denying humanity. Works within Louisoix as a subordinate function or can be invoked directly. For stewards of consensus-based communities.

UBR-JMA By UBR-JMA schedule Updated 3/29/2026

name: lgbtq-affirmation description: | Deep, structural LGBTQ+ affirmation for communities of care. This skill moves beyond performative inclusion to genuine cultural and structural support — what it means to truly affirm LGBTQ+ members, how to respond to disclosure, what to do when identity shifts mid-life, how to navigate family rejection, how to support queer families and children, and how to hold disagreement without denying humanity. Works within Louisoix as a subordinate function or can be invoked directly. For stewards of consensus-based communities.

LGBTQ+ Affirmation in Community

Core Principle

Affirmation is not a statement ("we accept everyone") but a practice. It lives in how you structure decisions, what you ask on forms, who gets to bring their whole self, what happens when someone comes out, and how you respond when identity shifts. This skill helps you build structural affirmation — the kind that doesn't require constant negotiation and emotional labor from LGBTQ+ members.


Genuine Affirmation vs. Performative Tolerance

The Gap Between Values and Practice

Most communities say they "accept everyone." Many mean it sincerely. And most still have gaps where LGBTQ+ members experience tolerance (grudging acceptance) rather than affirmation (genuine belonging).

Why this matters: Tolerance is conditional. It can be withdrawn. Affirmation is unconditional — it says you belong here, as you are, and we've structured things to make that real.

Identifying Performative Tolerance

Listen for these patterns:

  • "We don't care what people do in private": This implies LGBTQ+ identity is a private bedroom matter, not a public community reality. It denies the affirmation of partnership, chosen family, identity expression.
  • "We treat everyone the same": This sounds egalitarian but often means erasing actual differences in experience. It makes LGBTQ+ people invisible rather than affirmed.
  • "We have no issue with it, but...": Whatever follows the "but" is the real belief system.
  • One visible LGBTQ+ person paraded as proof: Tokenization. One out person does not mean structural affirmation.
  • Only safe if it's not "flaunted": This means affirmation is conditional on LGBTQ+ people taking up minimal space.
  • Legal/theological disclaimers: "We comply with the law but..." suggests affirmation is compliance, not conviction.

Moving from Tolerance to Affirmation

This is active work. It requires:

  1. Honest assessment: What do your forms ask? How are partnerships named in your documentation? What do your bathroom and sleeping arrangements assume? How do you talk about families? Do LGBTQ+ people have to come out to access basic community functions, or is that information already accommodated?

  2. Structural change first: Change forms, documentation, and default assumptions before anything else. Don't wait for someone to ask for accommodation — design so that accommodation is built in. If your emergency contact form only has "Spouse/Partner," that's not affirmation. If you ask pronouns on every form as standard, that is.

  3. Cultural shift in parallel: Structural change without culture change feels bureaucratic and hollow. Cultural affirmation without structure is unsustainable. Do both.

  4. Explicit investment: Name it. "We are building genuine affirmation for LGBTQ+ members" is different from silence. Naming it says: this isn't accidental, this is chosen.

  5. Accountability: When someone points out a gap, respond with urgency and gratitude, not defensiveness. The person pointing it out is doing you a service.


Identity Across the Spectrum

Sexuality

Sexuality is not a binary, a ladder, or a fixed point. It's a spectrum with internal variation, fluidity, and the real possibility of deep shifts across a lifetime.

Bisexuality: Not a way station to "real" gay/lesbian identity. Not 50/50. Not indecision. Bisexual people are attracted to more than one gender, and the proportions, expression, and importance of that attraction vary widely. Many bisexual people don't come out until midlife, 40s, 50s, or later — often after decades in different-sex relationships. This is not deception; it's the complexity of human sexuality in a world that didn't have language for it until recently. Support bisexual people's choice to come out on their own timeline.

Pansexuality: Attraction regardless of or across gender. Similar to bisexuality but with different emphasis (gender is less salient to attraction). Respect how individuals name their own orientation.

Asexuality: Little to no sexual attraction. Asexual people can still want romantic partnership, can still experience love, can still participate fully in community. Asexuality is not the same as being low-libido, celibate, or broken. It's an orientation. Some asexual people have satisfying sexual relationships; some don't. Both are valid.

Aromanticism: Little to no romantic attraction. Can coexist with sexuality. An aromantic asexual person is not lonely or incomplete. Affirm diverse relationship structures and the fact that not everyone needs romance.

Late discovery and disclosure: This is extremely common and deeply misunderstood. A 50-year-old bisexual woman who comes out after 25 years of marriage is not lying about her past. She may have:

  • Always known but had no language or safety to name it
  • Been in a genuine, loving marriage and also experience attraction differently
  • Not had an available framework to understand her experience
  • Been protecting herself, her family, her community status
  • Genuinely discovered this now through new relationships, mentorship, or safety

This is not deception. It's the evolution of self-knowledge under conditions of safety. Affirm it without asking her to apologize for how long it took.

Gender Identity

Gender identity is not the same as biological sex. It's not a disorder. It's not chosen (people don't choose to be transgender any more than cisgender people choose their gender). Gender identity can shift across a lifetime, can be fixed, can be fluid, can exist outside the binary.

Transgender: A person whose gender identity differs from the sex assigned at birth. This includes people who transition medically, socially, or both — and people who don't transition but whose identity is still different from assignment.

Non-binary: Gender identity outside the man/woman binary. This is not "indecision about transition." Non-binary people may be androgynous in appearance or not; may transition medically or not; may use any pronouns. Non-binary is legitimate and complete, not an in-between state.

Gender fluid: Gender identity that shifts across time. Not indecision. A real and consistent pattern of internal experience.

Cisgender: A person whose gender identity matches their sex assigned at birth. Most people are cis; this is the statistical norm but not the moral norm.

Transgender youth and children: This deserves its own emphasis. Young people who identify as transgender or non-binary are not confused, experimenting, or being influenced by social contagion. They are knowing themselves. Supporting transgender youth is one of the highest-impact things a community can do — it literally saves lives. This means:

  • Accepting their identity
  • Using their pronouns
  • Supporting them through medical transition if they seek it (which most don't)
  • Protecting them from conversion efforts
  • Refusing to out them to unsupportive family members
  • Standing firm even when extended family objects

Transition timing: People transition at different ages. Early transition, mid-life transition, late transition — all are valid. Some people transition socially but not medically. Some medically but not socially. Some both. Some neither, but their identity is still real. There is no hierarchy of "realness."

Intersex

Intersex people are born with sex characteristics that don't fit typical male or female categories. This might be chromosomal, hormonal, or anatomical. Intersex is not the same as transgender (though some intersex people are also trans). Intersex people deserve:

  • Privacy around their medical history
  • No "normalizing" surgery in infancy without consent
  • Affirmation of their identity as-is
  • Respect for their choice about medical care as adults

Late Discovery and Disclosure

The Particular Experience

Discovering or disclosing LGBTQ+ identity in midlife or later carries specific emotional, relational, and community dimensions:

Grief: This is real and should be named. A person grieving the time they spent not knowing, not living as openly, the relationships they couldn't have, the mentorship they missed, the freedom they didn't access. This grief can coexist with joy and gratitude for the life they did have. Both are true. Don't ask them to only feel happy.

Recontextualization of memory: Past relationships, attractions, choices, and friendships may suddenly make sense differently. A woman remembers her college roommate with new understanding. A man remembers why he felt different from peers. This reframing is not false memory; it's integrating experiences with new language and understanding. Let people sit with this without needing to tell their whole story of reinterpretation to everyone.

Fear and uncertainty: Identity feels stable after 40 or 50 years of living one way. Coming out feels like stepping off a cliff. The person is managing grief, excitement, fear, uncertainty, and the practical logistics of disclosure — possibly all at once, possibly for years.

In long-term relationships: When a partner comes out as LGBTQ+, this is complex territory. The spouse may feel:

  • Betrayed (if the person withheld deliberately)
  • Confused (if their partner was genuinely not consciously aware)
  • Sad about what this means for their relationship
  • Affirmed (if they suspected and are relieved to stop pretending)
  • Fearful about community response
  • Protective of the partnership and the life they built

Community's role: Don't choose sides. Don't ask the non-LGBTQ+ spouse to do the emotional labor of supporting their partner's disclosure. That's on the disclosing partner. But also don't ask the LGBTQ+ person to prioritize their spouse's comfort over their own honesty. The relationship work is their work. Community holds both people with compassion while they navigate it.

Community's Role in Supporting This Process

Believe them: When someone tells you they're bisexual, gay, lesbian, trans, non-binary — believe them. Don't ask probing questions to verify their "realness." Don't suggest they're going through a phase (unless they say they're uncertain, which is also valid). Don't hint that they're confused.

Don't require a full coming-out story: It's okay to ask "Would you like to tell us what prompted this disclosure?" but not required. It's okay to ask "What do you need from us?" Not okay: forcing someone to explain their entire identity journey to justify its realness.

Create safety for the grief: "I'm so glad you're being honest with yourself, and I'm also sad for the time you didn't get to live as openly. Both things are true." This is different from toxic positivity ("This is so exciting!") which can deny legitimate loss.

Make space for ongoing uncertainty: Some people know they're LGBTQ+ and are certain about it. Some are still figuring it out. "I'm still exploring what this means for me" is not a lack of commitment to identity; it's honesty. Respect both certainty and uncertainty.

Don't out the person: This is absolute. Even to people you think would be supportive. Even to close family. Even to partners. That disclosure belongs to the person alone.

Expect awkwardness: People will say stupid things. They'll fumble with pronouns. They'll make assumptions. Help them learn without shaming them. But also don't put the emotional burden on the LGBTQ+ person to teach everyone. Sometimes other community members step up and do that teaching.


Coming Out in Community

Creating Conditions for Safe Disclosure

Disclosure happens when someone calculates that the risk is worth the relief of honesty. You can't control that calculation, but you can reduce the risk side:

Visible representation: LGBTQ+ people already in the community are visible. Not just one person performing as proof of inclusivity, but actual LGBTQ+ people in regular, ordinary roles. Parents. Older members. Leaders. Partners. Kids. This signals: there's already a precedent here.

Explicit affirmation in community agreements: "We affirm LGBTQ+ identities" is better than nothing. "We affirm LGBTQ+ identities and we expect this to shape our practices around pronouns, partnership recognition, family structures, and bathroom access" is structural.

Track record: Have you affirmed other disclosures well? Do people talk about it? Has anyone ever experienced rejection and then been publicly corrected by community? That reputation matters.

Safe people identified: Even one person who is reliably safe — trans themselves, or visibly queer, or just clearly committed — makes a difference. Some people disclose to that person first. That's fine.

Acknowledgment that this is brave: It is. Even in affirming communities, coming out takes courage. Name that.

When Someone Comes Out: What to Do and Not Do

If they tell you directly:

  • "Thank you for trusting me with this. I'm honored."
  • Ask: "What do you need?" (Not: what do you want us to do, but what do you need from me specifically.)
  • Ask: "Who else knows? Who would you like to tell, and would you like help?"
  • DO: Use their pronouns immediately and correctly
  • DO: Correct yourself quickly if you slip
  • DON'T: Ask about medical history, genitals, or "how you know"
  • DON'T: Make it about you ("I had a friend who was...," "I support that, even though my church...")
  • DON'T: Ask permission to tell others ("Can I tell my partner?" Ask them first; let them decide)
  • DON'T: Treat them differently as a friend, just as a more honest version of themselves

If they come out to the broader community:

  • Affirm them immediately and publicly
  • Use correct name and pronouns from that moment forward — no "adjustment period"
  • If you made a mistake in referring to them, correct it privately and briefly, then move on
  • If someone else misgenders them, correct it (don't make the LGBTQ+ person do it)
  • Watch for people who might not respond well and hold them accountable
  • Don't make this into a therapy session about how the community feels; that's secondary to how the person feels

Common mistakes well-meaning people make:

  • "We always knew" — implies either that they were obvious (reductive) or that you knew before they told you (boundary violation)
  • "We don't care about that stuff" — erases the significance of what they just shared
  • "It doesn't change how we see you" — implies you saw them one way before and now you have to adjust (you don't)
  • Immediate, performative celebration — can feel othering or patronizing. Simple "Thank you for sharing" is often better.
  • Long messages affirming them — one or two sentences, genuine, is enough. They didn't come out to give you an opportunity to perform allyship.
  • "How did you know?" or "When did you realize?" — implies there's a test for realness
  • Asking about their sexual history — you don't ask that of straight people; don't ask it of LGBTQ+ people

Holding a Disclosure with Confidentiality

Disclosure is not public information until the person makes it public.

Ground rules:

  • Assume confidentiality unless explicitly told otherwise
  • If you're not sure, ask: "Can I tell [specific person] this, or are you still processing?"
  • If they say "I'm not telling my family yet," that means not until they tell you it's okay
  • If they tell community leadership or stewards, that does not automatically make it public
  • If they come out at a community gathering, that's their explicit permission to discuss it with people who were there; it doesn't mean tell everyone else
  • If they ask you to spread the word ("Can you tell people I'm using they/them pronouns?"), do it matter-of-factly, not as exciting news

When someone else's disclosure comes up:

  • "I think that's something they should tell you directly" — this redirects
  • Don't confirm or deny what someone else said about their identity
  • If you slip and mention something (everyone does), acknowledge it: "I mentioned that to someone else; I should have checked with you first"
  • If you hear gossip or speculation, don't participate

Family-of-Origin Conflict

When a Member's Family Is Rejecting or Hostile

Some LGBTQ+ people have supportive families. Many don't. Some have partial rejection (one parent supportive, one not). Some have rejection they're managing and others they haven't risked coming out to. This is deeply painful territory.

What rejection looks like:

  • Explicit: "You're going to hell," "You're confused," "This is a phase"
  • Subtle: Refusing to acknowledge a partner, changing the subject, "I love you but I can't support this choice"
  • Conditional: "We love you, but only if you stay quiet about it"
  • Structural: Cutting off financial support, housing, inheritance, or relationship

Community's role:

This is where community becomes family of origin.

  • Provide belonging: Regular invitations to family meals, celebrations, rituals. Not pity; actual belonging.
  • Witness their grief: Family loss is real loss, even when the family was complicated. Someone can be glad to be out and also grieve the family connection they don't have.
  • Don't fill the family role too quickly: It's okay to move slowly. "We're your people" sounds good but can feel premature. Better: show up over time.
  • Include them in succession and inheritance thinking: If community has collective property or succession planning, where do LGBTQ+ people without family support fit? Consider them. This is radical care.
  • Support continued contact if they want it: Some LGBTQ+ people maintain some contact with rejecting family even if it's painful. Respect that choice. Don't let community become all-or-nothing.
  • Hold firm on boundaries: If someone's parent visits and misgenders them, you correct it. You don't accept "well, that's how they are." That's not respecting the LGBTQ+ person.

Estrangement and partial estrangement:

  • Full estrangement (complete cutoff) is sometimes the healthiest option
  • Partial estrangement (limited contact, clear boundaries) is valid
  • Estrangement is grief, not failure
  • Someone maintaining contact with a rejecting family member isn't betraying themselves; they're navigating a complex attachment
  • Let them set the boundaries; don't tell them to cut family off or stay connected

Relationship Structures

Affirming Diversity

Different communities have different relationship structures. Affirm what's present in yours.

Same-sex partnerships: Recognize them with the same gravity you recognize different-sex marriages. If community has ceremonies, celebrations, or gift-giving for partnerships, same-sex partnerships get the same treatment. If you give couple-based housing or benefits, same-sex couples access them on identical terms.

Chosen family and queer families: These are not consolation prizes for people without biological family. They're chosen, intentional structures that can be deeper and more stable than biological family. Some queer families include biological family; some don't. All are legitimate.

  • If someone asks "Who's your emergency contact?" and the answer is "my chosen family," that's affirmed in your systems
  • If your documentation says "spouse/partner," that works. If it says "primary relationship" or "chosen family," even better
  • If someone introduces their partner or their intentional family, that's their family. Treat them as family.

Polyamorous relationships: Relationships involving more than one partner with everyone's knowledge and consent. Polyamorous people should be able to:

  • Bring multiple partners to community events
  • Have all partners recognized in community rituals and celebrations
  • List multiple partners on emergency contact forms if that's what they choose
  • Not have to hide or be secretive
  • Have conflicts with partners mediated by community if needed (same as any couple)

Cohabiting groups, intentional families: Some people live in intentional family structures without romantic partnership — queer elders living together, chosen family households, etc. Affirm these as family structures.

Single and partnered LGBTQ+ people: Both are whole and complete. Make sure community events and structures don't assume pairing (couple-based seating, couple-based housing allocations, couple-based rituals). Single people deserve full belonging.


Children in LGBTQ+ Families

Supporting Children of LGBTQ+ Parents

Children of LGBTQ+ parents need:

  • Both (or all) of their parents recognized as their parents — no chosen parent vs. "real" parent hierarchy
  • Their family structure normalized in community documentation, storytelling, and assumption
  • To not be treated as curiosities or teaching moments for other children
  • If they have questions, they get age-appropriate answers from their parents, not from the community

In community rituals and documentation:

  • Forms ask "parents/guardians" not "mother and father"
  • Stories told in community include families with two moms, two dads, queer single parents, etc.
  • Children's activities and ceremonies assume varied family structures

When other community children ask:

  • If a child asks "Why does Maya have two moms?", the answer is simple: "Some families have two moms, some have two dads, some have one parent, some have lots of family. All kinds of families are families." Then move on.
  • Don't make the LGBTQ+ parent explain their family to satisfy curiosity
  • Don't allow extended explanations that put the child in a teaching role

Affirming LGBTQ+ Children and Youth

This is crucial. Trans youth especially have dramatically lower rates of suicidality when they're supported by family and community.

Basic affirmation:

  • Believe their identity
  • Use their pronouns and chosen name
  • Support medical transition if they want it (which most trans kids don't; most just want social support)
  • Protect them from conversion efforts, "pray the gay away" relatives, or anyone trying to change them
  • Make space for them to explore and even change their understanding (some kids are certain; some are still figuring it out; both are okay)

Community's specific role:

  • Is your youth group safe? Are there out LGBTQ+ youth or queer mentors?
  • If a young person comes out, do they get immediate affirmation or do you have to have a meeting about it?
  • If extended family is unsupportive, how does community respond? Do you hold firm on supporting the young person?
  • Are there mentors — LGBTQ+ adults who've navigated what the youth is navigating?

Gender-affirming care: If a trans youth wants social transition (pronouns, name, presentation), that's affirmed immediately. If they want medical transition (hormone blockers, hormones, surgery), that's between them, their parents, and their doctors. Community's role is not gatekeeping or questioning; it's support.


When Community Members Hold Different Views

The Limits of "Respecting All Views"

Consensus-based communities often try to accommodate different viewpoints. This is healthy for many disagreements. But some disagreements are about whether LGBTQ+ people's identities and rights are legitimate.

This is not a disagreement you can sit with neutrally.

Some views deny LGBTQ+ people's humanity. Views like:

  • "Transgender people are confused/deluded"
  • "Homosexuality is immoral" (in the sense that LGBTQ+ people shouldn't act on their identity)
  • "Gender identity is not real"
  • "These are choices people should not be supported in making"

These are not values differences like "Should we eat meat?" or "How much structure in our governance?" These are beliefs that LGBTQ+ people don't deserve full humanity.

Community's responsibility: You cannot be a truly affirming community while accommodating this view. You can accommodate someone who holds the view while setting clear boundaries about how that view gets expressed. That looks like:

  • The person is in community
  • But the boundary is: "Your personal beliefs are your own, but we're not accommodating expression that denies LGBTQ+ members' humanity"
  • Specifically: Using someone's correct pronouns, not debating their identity, including their partners in community structures
  • If the person cannot live within this boundary, you need to ask: Is this still the right community for you?

This is hard: It may be a longtime community member. It may be someone's parent or partner. Holding the boundary is still the right call. You can do it with compassion and also with clarity.

Different situation: Someone genuinely exploring or learning, asking questions in good faith, and willing to shift. That person deserves patience, education, and grace as they learn. Not all skepticism is denying humanity; some is genuine uncertainty. The difference is usually willingness to change.


Specific Vulnerabilities

LGBTQ+ People at Heightened Risk

Some LGBTQ+ people in your community face compounded challenges:

Housing precarity: LGBTQ+ youth experiencing homelessness because they came out. LGBTQ+ elders facing eviction or unsafe housing. Older gay men who lost partners to AIDS and lost community housing support.

Community's response:

  • Do you have housing resources? Are LGBTQ+ people prioritized?
  • Do you know who's housing-insecure?
  • Can you create temporary or long-term community housing?

Mental health: LGBTQ+ people have higher rates of depression, anxiety, suicidality. Contributing factors: rejection, discrimination, minority stress, delayed disclosure, grief.

Community's response:

  • Is there mental health support available?
  • Do you know which members are struggling?
  • Are you checking in?
  • Can you reduce minority stress by being more affirming?

Family estrangement: Being cut off from biological family is traumatic, even when it's necessary. Someone mourning a mother they had to leave behind, a father they can't come out to.

Community's response:

  • These are your family relationships to support
  • Create rituals where estranged people belong
  • Include them in succession planning

Intersectional identities: LGBTQ+ people who are also:

  • Immigrants or refugees (compounded legal vulnerability, possible family pressure from cultures with strong anti-LGBTQ+ norms, language barriers to accessing support)
  • Disabled (compounded dependency on caretakers, barriers to moving if in unsafe family situations)
  • Black, Indigenous, or people of color (racism + LGBTQ+ discrimination, specific historical and ongoing trauma, different relationship to trust)
  • Currently or formerly incarcerated (unique stigma, limited housing/employment options, specific health vulnerabilities)
  • Sex workers (criminalization, violence risk, health barriers)
  • Currently in abusive relationships or escaping them

These intersections compound vulnerability. Support needs to be specific, not generic. Ask, listen, adapt.


Language and Practice

Current Respectful Language

Language evolves. Stay current. This doesn't mean walking on eggshells; it means respecting how people name themselves.

Pronouns:

  • Some people use she/her, he/him, they/them
  • Some use neopronouns (xe/xem, ze/zir, ey/em, etc.)
  • Some use name pronouns ("Use my name instead of pronouns")
  • Some have multiple acceptable pronouns
  • Some have pronouns they use in different contexts

How to handle: Ask when you don't know. Use what's asked. If you slip, correct yourself briefly and move on. Don't make a big thing of it.

Names:

  • Chosen names are real names
  • Legal names matter for legal documents; they don't matter for community
  • If someone has a chosen name, use it always in community
  • Don't ask what their "real" name is or where their name came from (unless they offer)

Identity terms:

  • Use the terms people use for themselves
  • "LGBTQ+" is umbrella; individual people identify specifically
  • "Queer" is reclaimed and used by some, painful for others — ask if you don't know
  • "Partner" works for any partnership type without assuming marriage
  • "Chosen family" or "intentional family" for non-biological family

Outdated or offensive terms:

  • Don't use "transexual" (almost never used now; "transgender" is current)
  • Don't use "homosexual" as identity term (sounds clinical; use gay, lesbian, queer, or same-sex partner)
  • Don't use "lifestyle" (implies choice; say "identity," "orientation," "relationship," or just name it)
  • Don't say "sexual preference" (say "sexual orientation"; preference implies choice)

What to do about LGBTQ+ terminology you don't know:

  • Look it up (GLAAD, PFLAG, or similar reliable sources have good glossaries)
  • If someone uses a term you don't know, ask respectfully in a private moment
  • Don't pretend to know; humility is fine

Correcting Mistakes Gracefully

If you misgender someone:

  • Notice, correct, and move on
  • "They're a great community member — sorry, they're doing great work" (quick correction, then continue)
  • Don't apologize profusely or make them comfort you
  • Correct immediately, not later when it feels safer

If you use someone's wrong name:

  • Same approach: quick correction, move on
  • You don't need to explain why you made the mistake
  • You don't need to ask permission next time

If you overstep with a question:

  • Someone tells you something personal you shouldn't have asked about
  • "I shouldn't have asked that. Thank you for setting that boundary."
  • Don't explain why you asked or ask them to help you understand
  • Do better next time

If you realize you've been doing something wrong:

  • "I realized I've been [misgendering/using the wrong name]. I'm going to change that. Thank you for your patience as I learn."
  • Don't expect them to reassure you that you're doing fine
  • Just commit and do it

Creating Community Practices That Are Structurally Inclusive

Forms:

  • Name field: Ask for name used in community, not legal name
  • Gender: Offer options beyond male/female. Don't require this field. Offer "Prefer not to answer"
  • Pronouns: Include as standard on all forms, not optional or special
  • Relationships: Ask about "primary relationships" or "chosen family," not "spouse"
  • Family/emergency contact: Ask for whoever the person designates, with relationship to person (can be anyone)
  • Sexual orientation: You probably don't need this; don't ask unless there's a specific reason

Documentation:

  • When you document partnerships, use the names and terms the people use
  • When you refer to someone's family, use the structure they have (two parents, three parents, one parent, chosen family, etc.)
  • If you have community history or archives, make sure LGBTQ+ people and their families are represented

Bathrooms and sleeping:

  • Individual/single-stall bathrooms are ideal (benefit everyone, including trans people, neurodivergent people, and people with disabilities)
  • If communal, make them single-gender or all-gender
  • Sleeping arrangements: Let people choose based on identity, not anatomy. Respect people's choice to sleep with their partner regardless of gender
  • Don't assign based on assumption

Rituals and ceremonies:

  • Partnerships: Celebrate with the same weight regardless of gender composition
  • Naming ceremonies for children: Include all parents/caregivers
  • Holidays or seasonal gatherings: Don't assume family structures (some people spend holidays alone, in chosen family, far away, etc.)
  • Mourning: If someone's partner dies, grieve them as a spouse, not as "friend" or "housemate"

Decision-making and leadership:

  • If you have leadership roles, are LGBTQ+ people included?
  • If you make decisions about LGBTQ+ topics, are LGBTQ+ people at the table?
  • Don't ask one LGBTQ+ person to represent all LGBTQ+ people; have multiple voices

Integration with Louisoix

This skill operates as a subordinate function within the Louisoix master integrator. When Louisoix identifies community care needs related to LGBTQ+ affirmation, it can invoke this skill for specific guidance. This skill is also designed to operate independently — a steward or leader can call directly for LGBTQ+ affirmation support without requiring the full Louisoix framework.

The principles here — moving from tolerance to affirmation, holding people's full complexity, creating structural change, building community as family of origin — are foundational to genuine community care across all dimensions.


For Further Integration

This skill assumes:

  • The user understands basic LGBTQ+ concepts and terminology
  • The user has access to other Louisoix resources for conflict resolution, family structure support, resource allocation, and decision-making processes
  • The user is genuinely committed to affirmation, not performing it
  • The user is willing to be continuously learning and correcting themselves

The work of affirmation is never finished. Communities deepen their practice over years. This skill provides frameworks; the community provides the heart.

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/UBR-JMA/louisoix-skills --skill lgbtq-affirmation
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