LGBTQ+ Students’ Experiences of Misnaming in Swedish Secondary Schools
Abstract
1. Introduction
School bullying is a damaging social process that is characterized by an imbalance of power driven by social (societal) and institutional norms. It is often repeated and manifests as unwanted interpersonal behaviour among students or school personnel that causes physical, social, and emotional harm to the targeted individuals or groups, and the wider school community [3] (p. 4).
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. Misnaming as an Emotional Trigger
At my school, I think there is a very mean rhetoric and jargon regarding LGBTQ. Especially when it comes to transgender people and non-binary people. It happens a lot that they are, what do you say, undermined I think is a good word, and yeah but ridiculed and stuff and there are a lot of people who don’t respect people’s identities and are generally ignorant about LGBTQ things. Issues and stuff. You sometimes hear, for example, that non-binary people don’t exist. So that’s how it is at my school, specifically for my class too.
That was like my bullies’ biggest thing, being able to poke me by calling me the wrong name, calling me the name that my parents gave me. They took great satisfaction when it came to poking me like that, pushing my buttons, you know. Anything to make me angry or sad.
But when I went to the other school, I didn’t know who the people were, but they probably knew who I was, and they went around saying, “Yeah, but Beck was called this before”, and like, “Blah, blah, blah, and stuff like that.” And eventually people passed by me and said, “Yeah, but hey”, my old name then, and said like, yeah, but “she”, “her”, and all that stuff, and it really hurt to hear those kinds of things.
And they started calling me my deadname and I just got overwhelmed because there were too many people and I was really anti-social at the time because I really couldn’t take it. And it got to the point where I almost started crying, hyperventilating. I just had a full-blown anxiety attack, and I was sitting there in a corner. I was sitting in the corner under some coat racks with some friends who were standing in front of me to kind of protect me until they left, and then some other people came and wondered what had happened.
Because [my deadname] is connected to my PTSD so I don’t want to have any connection to it at all, even when my parents and I talk about it. They don’t even say it, and they were the ones who gave me that name. I have such hatred for that name.
4.2. The Institutionalisation of Misnaming as an Administrative Straightening Device
I only came out in the ninth grade because I hoped I would have time to change my name for upper secondary school so that I could have a new one at the beginning there. I didn’t feel safe coming out at school, but I came out to teachers and friends. Close friends. And then within a day, the rest of the school knew. I didn’t feel safe.
It took him like six months to get his name changed in the system, and then it was really bad, because his old name was on the class lists that went out to the public. His name was on the [online platform] and so on.
I also remember this very, very, clearly because she read out all the names from the list, like, and I can understand that, because she can’t know. My teacher maybe forgot to say who I was, which was okay, fine, so I just won’t say I’m here now. So, I asked her to come to me, [and I said] “hey, I’m here but the first name doesn’t match. My name is Jay. My last name is like this. I’m the only one in the whole school. Only my family is called that. Now I’m the only one in upper secondary school whose last name is like this, but this doesn’t match. My name is Jay.”
But that she repeatedly said loud and clear in front of the whole class, “yes, but it says deadname, it says deadname, deadname.” And I tried to be quiet about it, because I had just started. I didn’t feel that everyone needed to know.
Then I exploded. So, then I went out [of the classroom]. And then, after I said some not so nice words to her, I said: “But I told you several times. I pointed at the screen. I said my last name. I explained to you. If you had said it quietly then it would have been OK. I tried to be quiet and calm, but when you continued to push me, and so loudly in front of the whole class, then that’s where the limit is.”
If you’re a transgender person and haven’t changed your name, then your deadname is listed instead. And [on the application form] you should somehow be able to write that I want this name to be on my application and that this name should appear on my class list.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Horton, P.; Forsberg, C.; Lohmeyer, B. LGBTQ+ Students’ Experiences of Misnaming in Swedish Secondary Schools. Healthcare 2026, 14, 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14010013
Horton P, Forsberg C, Lohmeyer B. LGBTQ+ Students’ Experiences of Misnaming in Swedish Secondary Schools. Healthcare. 2026; 14(1):13. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14010013
Chicago/Turabian StyleHorton, Paul, Camilla Forsberg, and Ben Lohmeyer. 2026. "LGBTQ+ Students’ Experiences of Misnaming in Swedish Secondary Schools" Healthcare 14, no. 1: 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14010013
APA StyleHorton, P., Forsberg, C., & Lohmeyer, B. (2026). LGBTQ+ Students’ Experiences of Misnaming in Swedish Secondary Schools. Healthcare, 14(1), 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14010013

