Dear Amy >> I’m a young professional in my second year at an office job that I love. I’m also nonbinary — neither a man nor a woman — and my pronouns are the gender-neutral “they/them.”

My workplace is very accepting, and my pronouns are displayed on our agency’s website and on a nameplate at my desk.

Most of my coworkers are mindful of how they refer to me, and correct themselves when they make mistakes. However, there are a few people in our small office who have trouble getting it right.

I have to make choices every day between the discomfort of getting misgendered and the vulnerability of correcting others, and I accept this as part of my daily life as an openly nonbinary individual.

But at a certain point, when someone I know well and see every day doesn’t even notice when they’ve gendered me incorrectly, it can be hurtful.

I try to continue correcting people that slip up, but it gets more difficult as it becomes clear they aren’t making the effort to avoid putting me in that position in the first place.

What should I do?

— Tired of Trying

Dear Tired >> When I use “they/them” pronouns in this space (referring to a nonbinary person, or to a person whose gender is simply not made clear), some readers push back with, “But ‘they/them’ is plural! An individual is singular!”

At this point (over five years after this usage became standard), this plural pushback is sounding less like a rationale and more like a refusal.

With the holdouts who are not merely making a mistake, but are not making any effort at all to refer to you correctly, you may attempt to redirect them by asking, “Can you tell me why you don’t use they/them to refer to me?”

Regardless of how they answer, you really should go to HR with your concern.

Anyone who misgenders you is disrespecting you, and also (it seems) violating your company’s values and policy.

Dear Amy >> I wrote the question published in your column signed “Far Away Friend,” regarding sending material gifts to elder friends.

Thank you and your readers for the excellent suggestions for gifting older friends.

I wrote letters (on actual paper with large type) to a few and made plans to travel to see other friends, who live closer.

Though it saddens me to lose our gifting traditions, the suggestions helped tremendously.

— Far Away Friend

Dear Far Away >> Receiving gifts from you seemed to inspire a lot of pressure in your elder friends to reciprocate.

I am so happy that you’ve transitioned to writing newsy letters and planning visits; this might initiate a lively correspondence.