You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience and security.

Skip to main
Blog

Unveiling Trevor's Values

BY: Trevor News
Donate

Trevor’s 25th year marks another important milestone: the introduction of our organization’s values. Our mission to create a brighter future starts with how we operate as an organization, and how we show up — day after day — to defend and protect the potential of LGBTQ young people. These values are a crystallization of conversations and heartfelt contributions from our staff, leadership, and board of directors, and we thank everyone for their role in shaping this next milestone chapter.

For the past 25 years, our shared values have been implicit. Starting today, they will be our north star illuminating our path forward. In Anand Giridharadas’s book, The Persuaders: At the Front Lines of the Fight for Hearts, Minds, and Democracy, he describes the power of common values to unlock innovative solutions: communicate shared values with your intended audience, state the problem you seek to solve and its presenting causes, and compellingly communicate your mission-driven solution. In short, “show what you are for and show the kind of world you want,” Giridharadas says, and “paint the beautiful tomorrow.” By making our shared values explicit, we exponentially increase our ability to collaboratively solve problems as they arise. We can and will powerfully meet any and all challenging moments. 

We want Trevor to be a welcoming and healthy workplace where everyone thrives in service to our mission. Trevor’s values are more than aspirational; they are the road map to inclusion, efficiency, and grace. They are the thing that gives us a constant reference point to keep moving in the right direction and stay on track weathering storms that come our way. These values are our north star.

Heart: We care deeply and commit to do what matters.

Integrity: We build trust through our words and actions.

Community: Together, we are an unstoppable force for good.

Belonging: We serve as allies to the mission and one another.

Progress: We continuously move onward and upward.

Values are the light that brings our current community closer, and a defining force that attracts and engages like-minded folks to join us in furthering our journey as an unstoppable force for good. 

They remind us that we are in service to something bigger than ourselves — a call to improve the world around us for LGBTQ young people. Our legacy and impact will be greater than the sum of any of our individual contributions. After 25 years of progress, these values will vigilantly guide us forward, onward and upward, creating the brighter future all our LGBTQ young people deserve.

With gratitude and appreciation,

Peggy Rajski (She/Her/Hers), Founder/Interim CEO

Read more from
Blog

lululemon logo
Blog

lululemon’s Partnership with The Trevor Advances the Wellbeing and Health Equity of LGBTQ+ youth

We are partnering with lululemon to advance the wellbeing and improve the health equity of LGBTQ+ youth. The Trevor Project was announced as a national partner of the lululemon Centre for Social Impact when it was launched in October 2021. Support from lululemon in the amount of $3 million is helping The Trevor Project to scale our work and provide more LGBTQ+ youth with targeted suicide prevention and crisis intervention services, in addition to advancing our crucial advocacy work. As a transformative partner in Expansion & Advocacy, lululemon is continuing to support The Trevor Project in two of its most…
Logo for Jewish American Heritage Month on orange background.
Blog

Exploring Identity for Jewish American Heritage Month

As May rolls around, we recognize Jewish American Heritage Month, a time to celebrate the rich cultural history and contributions of Jewish Americans. As someone from a family with Jewish heritage, this month is a moment to connect to a tradition that is both religious and cultural. I have often been called “one ‘i’ away from having a Jewish last name” (my surname is Bernsten, but often misspelled as Bernstein)and, though I was not raised in a Jewish family, my paternal grandmother came from an Ashkenazi Jewish family in Lithuania and my identity – whether or not I could consider…