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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be surprised that pretty much everyone I know has given their child a ‘wacky’ name?

198 replies

custarddonut · 12/07/2019 14:21

I’m reluctant to give specific examples as it would be potentially outing but by way of comparison I mean that none of my friends’ kids have names that were fairly standard when I was growing up in the 80s. E.g. Rachel / Sarah / Lucy / Daniel / Matthew / John / David etc.

I appreciate that names go in and out of fashion, and I understand (to a degree) that parents perhaps want their kids to stand out (or at least not have what are perceived as ‘boring’ or totally run-of-the-mill names, but more often than not the names in use now (in my circles at least) are, in my opinion, pretentious at best and verging on the ridiculous at worst! Worst-case is where they are sort of just random words, rather than actual names, e.g. ‘snowy’. Or names like the Geldof children e.g. ‘Pixie’ etc. Then you get names which are like old age pensioner names but not necessarily the trendy ones …they seem so dreary to me! (e.g. Phylis) OR names which to me sound really American (and names that you’d need to be quite cool to pull off, or a bit more grown up – they don’t seem to suit kids IMO) e.g. Harrison / Grayson etc. When I think of it, not a single friend of mine has given their kid what I would consider to be a ‘normal’ name.. and this is of a circle of say, 25 kids.

AIBU to feel a bit disappointed about this? I know, each to their own, live and let live, but to me it seems a bit of a shame that ‘normal’ names seem so unfashionable these days…OR, if I were to call my child something like ‘Anna’, would I be setting them up for standing out (in the wrong way) when they go to school? Will the inverse happen and names like ‘John’ become the weird names?!?

OP posts:
baublegirl454 · 13/07/2019 23:11

@ooooohbetty yep Tuna. Plus there's a Blaize and a Storm. But Tuna is the best

PetraRabbit · 13/07/2019 23:20

OP, if UK fads are worrying you, try joining a Facebbok group for American parents- to- be.
You'll get lots of posts saying " I'm thinking Sullivan, Dakota, Townsend, Corbin or Cooper for a boy, then Brynn, Peyton, Taylor, Blake, Bodhi or Quinn for a girl". How on earth they designate all these random surnames to either male or female is still beyond me!!

UndertheCedartree · 13/07/2019 23:30

Names do just go in and out of fashion. I gave my daughter a lovely name that isn't particularly popular now but is quite common among my 90 year old patients. But one day our names will be 'elderly' names and our children's names 'normal'!

Claricethecat45 · 13/07/2019 23:32

I have a Bobby. Born 1991 and is officially Robert - but has always been Bobby.I still love it - for me its a sunny happy name and he is certainly that !

I have a Fred - Born 1993 and he has always been a Fred, never a Freddy...full name is Frederick.

I still love those names and relish using them - a lot - when I see them and both my boys love their own names.

I have come across several Fredericks and its usually shortened to Freddy...so Fred is always clear he isn't a Freddy-or Freddie....Bobby uses the strapline 'the only Bobby you'll know' on social media...and almost without exception, he is !

Eustasiavye · 14/07/2019 14:05

clarice "the only Bobby you'll know," I love it.

Eustasiavye · 14/07/2019 14:05

Btw I once had a car called Fred 😂

Eustasiavye · 14/07/2019 14:06

Cat not car!

SD1978 · 14/07/2019 14:30

I don't really care about the names......it's the enforced 'yoonique' spellings that irritate me. As obviously Jessieighkah (duh course it's pronounced Jessica) is going to love spelling that for the rest of her life because you're need for it to be written differently but sound the same trumps the poor kids future embarrassment.....

Hippee · 15/07/2019 16:02

ContinuityError - I imagine so, but I hope not Grin

LaurieMarlow · 15/07/2019 16:33

If you like cutey names choose a grown up version and shorten it

But there's a whole generation of cutey names growing up and it will be totally normal to see grown up Alfie's, Archie's, Evie's, Poppy's and so on floating around.

Tallgreenbottle · 15/07/2019 16:44

@custarddonut everyone from the late 80's were basically called Sarah, Rachel, Katy, Rebecca, Louise, Jessica, Sophie. I was one of 3 girls with the same name in my class alone (thats one form of ten forms in the school year) and one of about 18 in my school year.

Why would I ever want that for my kid? The 80's and 90's were shit times for names.

Tallgreenbottle · 15/07/2019 16:46

@Claricethecat45 three young people in my family are called Bobby and two are girls named after their grandfathers 😬

Eustasiavye · 17/07/2019 07:32

I'm still not convinced by this.
What are these wacky names please?

PeonyBlooms · 17/07/2019 10:39

This is the perfect thread to mention a woman I know called her little girl Kestrelle! Now I like an unusual name as much as anyone, but that one did raise an eyebrow.

With regards to the OP I do think you are being a little unreasonable. Fashions change and what you consider to be whacky names will be soon be the norm.

ToffeePennie · 17/07/2019 10:52

My kids have names which have consistently been used for as long as time (as far as I know). They are family names and I’m fairly confident they will always be consistently used.
My oldest is the only one in his year at his school with his name. There are a few out there names (amarleighah, marlee etc) and a couple of normal classics (James/Henry etc) but nothing that I would say is really out there.
I really didn’t want to give my kids names that like mine you never see on a headband or a cup. And I wanted my kids to have names that would grow with them.

LEELULUMPKIN · 17/07/2019 11:02

I like my name (I'm 49) but have never ever heard of a baby in the last 30+ years named it anywhere.

weaningwoes · 17/07/2019 11:38

My daughter has an unusual name. Honestly just picked it because I liked it best (my list included a lot of 'normal' names too, just the one me and DH could agree on). Now every time someone says in a lovely voice "Oh what a lovely name, how unusual!" I will suspect they are inwardly rolling their eyes and marking me down as a pretentious middle-class arsehole. Hey ho I suppose.

weaningwoes · 17/07/2019 11:43

Not to change the subject but does anyone think about etymology when choosing a name? For example I did think about using my mother's name as a middle name, but then found out it has a really boring/non-relevant meaning so changed my mind even though it is a nice name... similarly I love the name 'Aphra' (#pretentioustwatklaxon) but it means 'dust', which just isn't a nice meaning! I often think that's the problem with a lot of the traditional names - however nice they sound when you look into them they have really dull or inappropriate or 'God-y' meanings which a lot of people don't feel are relevant to them or their kids. So maybe that's one reason why some people get a bit 'out there', or prefer to just use 'nickname' versions?

Ifeelbloodyawful · 17/07/2019 12:04

My name was INSANELY popular in the eighties and as such I was surrounded by children with the same name throughout my schooling (which incidentally I hated!). I think it's a fairly classic sounding name, but it has been losing popularity over the years and now isn't very popular at all.
I think there are some truly classic names that will always be popular (ONS data confirms this!), and then others will come and go in terms of popularity/trends/fads.

I do agree that these days the vast majority of parents seem to be reaching for "unique" names but in the process this is causing those names to become more and more popular and less and less unique (not that there is any such thing as a truly unique name anyway).

When naming our children I was aware of my own experience of being one of many, so for both of them we chose names not in the top 100. Although they are both relatively classic names in my opinion, my son's name in particular . Definitely real names though!

aintnothinbutagstring · 17/07/2019 12:08

My dc both have 'weird' names (or non-English as the OP implies) because their dad is West African, they have English middle names but even those are not from the top 10 or even 100 maybe.

Carouselfish · 17/07/2019 12:16

As a teacher, it seems everyone is calling their kids names ending in the ee sound. That's what I'd say is the norm. I think as with actual fashion (clothes) almost anything goes, you can follow fashion or do your own thing and that's a nice place to be. Your normal is based on when you grew up and that's a pretty small window of time.
Mum-wise, I'd rather give a child a slightly interesting name. That way if they're a dull person, at least they'll have one thing that's memorable about them! I'd still ensure it was spellable, however.
Also like that names are getting a bit more cross cultural in the international world we live in.

HazelBite · 17/07/2019 13:30

DH read me a piece from a newspaper last week (the Guardian I think) about a man in Sweden who wanted to change his name to Tottenham (being a Tottenham Hotspur supporter) and it wasn't allowed.
Personally I can't see the difference between that and the name Brooklyn, both areas of large cities!

4cats2kids · 17/07/2019 13:40

I’m charting my family history at the moment. All the people with really common names can be really confusing. I wish my ancestors were more wacky!

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