Updated On: 15 June, 2023 03:06 PM IST | Mumbai | Maitrai Agarwal
Queer individuals across the spectrum share the microaggressions they regularly encounter and the stressors they experience every day

LGBTQIA+ individuals who do not conform to the cis-gender heteronormative binaries are subjected to microaggressions in their everyday lives. Photo courtesy: Asmita Meshram, Meghna Mehra
Do you remember the last time you said “that’s so gay”? What might have been a joke to you, can be triggering to an LGBTQIA+ individual. In this binary-obsessed cis-heteronormative world, such words and actions are casually used. For anyone who falls on the spectrum of gender and sexuality, this societal imposition deeply impacts their quality of life. “Living in a cis-heteronormative world, it is assumed that people are cis-gender and straight. People who do not fit in that narrow box have to bear discussions and conversations about their sexuality, gender identity and love life,” says Richa Vashista, a queer affirmative mental health practitioner. When cis-gender heterosexual (cis-het) individuals are innately coded with negative or inaccurate narratives, discrimination takes root.
Whether it is intentional or not, queer individuals are subjected to microaggressions in their everyday lives. “Microaggressions comprise comments or actions that subtly and often unconsciously or unintentionally express a prejudiced attitude towards members of a marginalized group. Which means that often intent doesn`t matter - the actions still cause harm. For example, when someone says ‘You`re a lesbian? But you`re so pretty. I`m sure lots of guys would want to date you.’ The assumption that someone is a lesbian because they haven`t been ‘picked’ by a guy is ridiculous,” explains Vashista.