Thứ Ba, 2 tháng 10, 2018

Waching daily Oct 3 2018

I'm Charlotte Lewis.

I'm from Geneva, Switzerland.

The first time I had to come out was to my mother.

I came out.

I was 16 years old.

We were in Geneva.

She said, "That's great.

But you're still going to marry a man, right?"

So I came out to my friends.

They said, "That's great, but you're still going to date guys, right?"

I came out to my dad.

You know, he was - he was wondering, am I going have children?

It felt like every time I came out, that people were okay with it but there was always a but.

So that kind of followed me for those first few years and I think it affected the way

that I carried myself and the way that I felt comfortable really coming out to people or

whether should I come out to people.

So I moved to San Francisco.

I joined my current employer.

I was about 22 at the time.

So, one of my very first projects was in Houston.

It was an oil and gas company.

So we went to the client site over there.

We were all in a conference room, which was our team room.

The client walked in and the conversation turned to politics and he said something extremely

homophobic.

It was very hurtful to me.

He didn't realize that I was gay.

My team didn't realize that I was gay.

But, you know, the team didn't say anything.

I didn't say anything.

It made me feel so guilty that I didn't say anything.

And, you know, I kind of had it in my head going in loops, like what I should have said

and what I could have said.

And so I promised myself right there that the next time that something like that would

happen, that I would, you know, I would stand up for myself and I would correct him or I

would go to my team and tell them that that made me feel really uncomfortable and ask

them to to help correct that as well.

It was at that time that I actually had a friend that said, "Well, you know, you should

you should join the the LGBT group at your company."

I thought yeah, why not?

So I joined the the LGBT group.

I remember the first time I joined, I actually went to a meeting and it was a bunch of people

around the table that were from all walks of life, like all ages and genders.

It was just really wonderful to find a group of people that not only were - could be friends

and could be a network - but also I could look up to and could be a role model just

for in life in general.

And so that really changed my outlook.

I actually got quite a bit coaching around what I could do if the situation, you know,

like Houston occurred again.

You know, how I - like, what resources I had available to me.

In general, it just made me feel much more comfortable that I could be myself.

I could show up and be successful.

I did get my moment of - what's the word? - got my moment to redeem myself, you know,

after the Houston event, let's call it.

I was on a project and somebody who reported up to me came to me and said, "Hey, I feel

a little bit uncomfortable because last night, this client said something really inappropriate

to me.

Something sexual."

Not that it changes anything but but this man was much older than her and she felt really

uncomfortable.

She said, "But, you know, he's really drunk.

He was really drunk.

I don't want him to lose his job.

I don't think we should say anything."

And I said, "No, we should absolutely say something, you know?

Like, absolutely.

That's not appropriate.

You know, this is a professional setting and you should stand up for yourself."

So we went to our mutual boss and she reacted instantly.

We went to, you know, the top, like the leadership from the client.

HR got involved and everything with dealt with within 24 hours.

There wasn't repercussions, you know, like weird retaliation or anything like that.

It just was dealt with.

I think it was really a lesson to say you can stand up for yourself even if it's somebody

that, you know, you're not sure how it's going to affect you in the future, and people are

going to support you.

Today, I actually the lead the LGBT circle that I once joined, you know, 8 years ago.

The reason I do that is because I had such a - it had such a strong impact on me.

I want to be able to be that same role model for others and make sure that they stand up

for themselves and they can be themselves.

You don't just come out once.

You have to come out every single day.

And that's actually incredibly powerful.

Coming out is an act of activism, right?

It's your moral duty to come out and to tell people who you are and have those conversations

and change hearts and minds.

For more infomation >> "Coming Out Is An Act Of Activism." Lesbian Reflects On Being Out In The Workplace. - Duration: 5:30.

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Family seeking help finding Billings woman they say is missing - Duration: 0:36.

For more infomation >> Family seeking help finding Billings woman they say is missing - Duration: 0:36.

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Princess Eugenie wedding: How is Eugenie related to Prince William and Prince Harry? - Duration: 2:42.

 Princess Eugenie will tie the knot with Jack Brooksbank at St George's Chapel, in the grounds of Windsor Castle, on October 12, 2018

She paid a visit to the chapel earlier this year when Prince Harry and Meghan Markle got married on May 19

 How is Eugenie related to Prince William and Prince Harry? The eighth in line to the throne is William and Harry's first cousin

  The princes' father, Prince Charles, is the brother of Prince Andrew. Andrew married Sarah Ferguson in 1986 and they had two daughters together called Eugenie and Beatrice

 A four-year-old Prince William was also a pageboy at their wedding. William and Harry's late mother, Princess Diana, was known to be close friends with Sarah

  Their children all grew up together and went on holiday with their grandparents, the Queen and Prince Phillip, at Balmoral and Sandringham

 Eugenie is the third out of four granddaughters of the Queen. The British monarch also has four grandsons and Prince Harry is the third, according to Town and Country

 Even though Eugenie has the same wedding venue as her first cousin, their big days will actually be quite different

 Eugenie and Jack's wedding will take place on Friday, October 12 at 11am, while Harry and Meghan married at 12pm on a Saturday

 Both weddings chose to invite members of the public, although Eugenie and Jack will have 1,200 compared to Harry and Meghan's 2

640 people. Their receptions will also be different as Eugenie and Jack will be extending their ceremony until the next day, where there will be a festival with a fairground and afternoon tea

Similarly to Meghan and Harry, they will still have a carriage procession after the ceremony

 This will be followed by a wedding reception luncheon hosted by the Queen at Windsor Castle

 

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