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

Skip to main
Blog

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

BY: Trevor News
Donate

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 impactful initiatives for expansion since its founding in 1998: our partnership with 988 (the largest crisis hotline offering in the United States since the creation of 911 emergency services) and our international expansion to Mexico.

We are thrilled to have lululemon’s partnership in supporting our work. Guided by the foundational belief that everyone has the right to be well, we will work together to achieve impact at scale and save more young LGBTQ+ lives.

Learn more about the lululemon Centre for Social Impact here.

Read more from
Blog

Three individuals supporting each other.
Blog

Title IX and Back to School: What it Means for LGBTQ+ Young People

It’s back to school season, and millions of young people across the country are returning for another academic year. Returning to school can bring up a multitude of feelings — excitement to see old friends and make new ones, anticipation of meeting new teachers, and even some nerves about more difficult course material. LGBTQ+ young people experience all of the same emotions when returning to school, but there’s often additional factors including  anxiety, depression, and other adverse mental health outcomes depending on how supportive and affirming their family, community, and school environment is.  This past April, the U.S. Department of…
Show Up for Black LGBTQ Youth Illustration
Blog

What Supporting Black LGBTQ Young People Really Looks Like

Being Black is hard. Due to the unique historical and current systems of oppression we face, the simple feat of continuing to exist and thrive in this country is an act of sheer rebellion for Black people. Countless scholars have illustrated myriad challenges to physical and mental health that Black people face, all stemming from systematic discrimination and racism. Mental health care providers and researchers alike have long been sounding the alarm about the mental health crisis among Black young people, specifically pointing to increasing rates of suicide. Still, in many ways reflective of our tenacity, Black people are incredibly…