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Kurtz
01-04-2008, 09:23 AM
(LifeWire) -- Pauline and Jeffrey Eadie, of Cleveland, had gathered the family together to watch home movies of their two older children as babies. In one movie, Jack, now 5, was looking skeptically at his then-newborn sister, now 3. "In the video, I was saying, 'Jack, go to the baby, go hug her,'" says Pauline. "And then at some point I said, 'Go kiss Emma.'"
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Unaware that her name had been changed when she was a newborn, Pauline Eadie's daughter, Caroline, looked at her and asked 'Who's Emma?'"

The Eadies are among a surprising number of parents who, following the birth of their child, suffer namer's remorse. In a recent poll of 1,219 mothers conducted by BabyCenter.com, 10 percent considered changing their baby's name. The reasons they gave ranged from being inspired by another name to having a relative disagree with the choice.

Regret is common after any big decision, and few prenatal decisions these days are as open to debate as picking a child's name. Rare are the parents who haven't invested in a small library of baby-name books or trolled the Internet for a name unique enough to be usefully Googled, but not so weird as to cause ridicule.

"Today, there's this perception that naming a child is almost like naming a product -- there's this huge national drive now to not be like anyone else," says Laura Wattenberg, author of "The Baby Name Wizard" and founder of the blog BabyNameWizard.com.

That may be one reason some parents have second thoughts when they realize they've picked the present-day equivalent of Jennifer or Justin.

In her first few years, 6-year-old Sophie Sauber's parents, Rob Sauber and Suzanne Ramljak, of Connecticut, were overwhelmed by the number of Sophies they encountered daily. Four out of 13 kids in their daughter's preschool class were named Sophie, and other parents were constantly yelling it at the mall. When Sophie was almost 4, they asked how she'd feel about being called Isadora, a name they'd considered before she was born.

"She understood our reasoning and liked the name. We weren't going to force her," says Ramljak. One day, after a trial period of a couple of months, she introduced herself as Isadora. "It was like, 'That's her name now!'"

Noting that by 12 months children already recognize the sound of their names, Dr. Karla Umpierre, a Miami psychologist and family counselor, encourages parents to get the child's input and approval if they decide to change the name after age 2. "It's best to change the name before then, because by 2 or 3 they have a sense of identity, and it could send mixed messages. The child might ask himself, 'Do you want to change me?'"

"Stability is very important for children," says Dr. Umpierre. "And changing a name could create a lot of insecurity."

For most parents, the urge comes long before the baby can say his or her own name. Wavering is not uncommon for those who figure they'll pick a name once they see the baby. "But that's a tall order to put on a newborn," says Wattenberg. "It's hard to look at this 7-pound thing and say, 'Oh! She's an Abigail!'" So they choose something quickly and then spend weeks second-guessing themselves.

That was the case for the Eadies. When their daughter was born, the nursery was full and the nurses were rushing them to sign the birth certificate and leave the hospital. "Emma seemed pretty," Pauline Eadie says. They sent out birth announcements, "but it just felt strange coming out of my mouth." They decided they preferred a family name, Caroline.

Adrienne and Matt Grayson, of Charleston, South Carolina, settled on the name Luke early in her pregnancy. "I also loved the name Beckett, but it felt a little weird, like Apple," says Adrienne Grayson, referring to the name actress Gwyneth Paltrow gave her daughter. When the baby was born, they named him Luke Beckett Grayson. What followed was a sea of engraved picture frames, monogrammed pillows, "Welcome Luke" signs drawn by the Grayson's older children -- and a wave of regret.

"I couldn't shut up about how we should call him Beckett instead of Luke, and I also started mourning my maiden name, Shaw," Adrienne Grayson says. "I thought I should've made that his middle name because we weren't going to have more kids."

The more she reflected, the more she wanted to change Luke's name to Beckett Shaw Grayson. The process involved hours on the phone with the Social Security office and the county clerk. She found that although it's legal to change a minor's name (as long as both parents consent), states don't always have a well-oiled system in place for regretful parents.

When her son's new Social Security card arrived, it read, erroneously, "Shaw Luke Grayson."

The Eadies, too, were bounced from one government agency to another. Eventually they filed the paperwork with a probate-court judge to change "Emma" to "Caroline."

Since learning of the name she had for the first eight weeks of her life, Caroline has taken to renaming her dolls.

She also has announced that she prefers the name Emma.
Baby Name Remorse (http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/personal/01/01/baby.name.change/index.html)

I've changed the names of my cats. :snicker

You like the names you gave your kids?

Saguaro
01-04-2008, 09:36 AM
I still like the names we gave to the boys

Kurtz
01-04-2008, 09:51 AM
I changed one from Precious to Ms Priss.
Ya know why? Coz she was not so precious. :lol

Saguaro
01-04-2008, 09:54 AM
I had a cat named Magee

Kurtz
01-04-2008, 10:07 AM
I had a cat named Magee

Just one cat? You poor thang. :lol

I ain't an ol' lady with lots of cats...anymore. :lmao

I had one named Lovey, but we called her Gladys when she was sick.
It helped the medicine go down easier, weird cat. :shrug

Sweet Tart
01-04-2008, 10:13 AM
How does one get the approval of a human under the age of 2? :think

I love all my kids' names :yep

Kurtz
01-04-2008, 10:15 AM
How does one get the approval of a human under the age of 2? :think

I love all my kids' names :yep

That takes a real special mom 'n dad to do that, kwim? :D

Saguaro
01-04-2008, 10:24 AM
How does one get the approval of a human under the age of 2? :think

I love all my kids' names :yep


Bribery

Partyless
01-04-2008, 12:51 PM
I don't understand why parents freak out over chosing names - it's not like you don't have nine freaking months to come up with something you like. My cousin took THREE WEEKS after her daughter was born and whined that a friend of hers had 'stolen' the name she wanted. If you don't want your kid to be one of a gazillon kids in their school with the same freaking name - don't look at the lists of most popular names and choose from that.

As for what we named our daughter - we love it. She has the first name of her great grandmother and her middle name is my mom's maiden name. We shortened it to a nickname and it suits her perfectly!

crazierthanever
01-04-2008, 02:54 PM
My little one had her name when she came. It suits her to a 't'. Sadly, calling her Isabella was the only lovely thing her birth mom did for her and she spelled it incorrectly. We fixed that when we adopted her. I don't care for her middle name but she likes it so it stayed (and my 'maiden' name was added as a second middle).

cassandra
01-04-2008, 03:04 PM
Okay here is my story. :(

I love my two older girls names. When I was pregnant with the baby I loved the name Eliza. When she was born the name did not suit her at all. It felt completely wrong. Still to this day I do not think she is an Eliza. We had a serious problem. We had nothing to fall back on.

After 3 days, with the hospital staff pestering us every couple hours we settled on the name Madeline. (Long i in the 3rd syllable) I like the name well enough and nothing else was jumping out at us. We decided to call her Maddie for short. That is when the trouble began.

I didn't love the name Maddie and was in serious turmoil over it. I would cry daily. I begged and pleaded with bbrown to change the name. (He said no because we had already sent out the announcements.) :roll Finally after 3 months it came to me, I would call her Mimi. In the blink of an eye her naming trouble was gone. I loved the name Mimi and I liked the name Madeline so all was good.

If I had been in the right frame of mind and had been given more time I would have named her Amelia with Mimi as the nickname. However, as it stands her name is Madeline/Mimi.

I think that naming a child is the most difficult thing that you have to do. I am already fretting over our son's name. I will have to post another thread to get some ideas. :lol

Kurtz
01-04-2008, 03:18 PM
I talked to 2 Eastern Indian guys who work the isp trouble
line for my phone company, their names were Steve 'n Nick. :lol

cassandra, ya gonna name your new son an 'American' name?

Maybe John Wayne brown? :wink

crazycase
01-04-2008, 04:03 PM
If I could I'd change their names to monster :para

Lone Laugher
01-06-2008, 09:20 AM
We had to decide whether or not to give our kids Japanese names or American names. We chose to name the boys in the same way many Italian boys get names...from uncles and other relatives on my side. With a surname like mine...you almost need a traditionally Italian first name for the boys. We gave them Japanese middle names....which mean "first dragon" and "the basis of honor", respectively.

Our daughter was a different story. The traditional names were Mary, Catherine etc. We went with a hybrid. Her name sounds Japanese, but has no real Japanese meaning....and is easy for Americans to say...and it ends in a vowell, so it flows with our last name.

Trueblue
01-06-2008, 09:27 AM
Just one cat? You poor thang. :lol

I ain't an ol' lady with lots of cats...anymore. :lmao

I had one named Lovey, but we called her Gladys when she was sick.
It helped the medicine go down easier, weird cat. :shrug

:lol

I love my son's names, they are not on the top ten, but not unrecognizable, either. The older one is named after his great-grandfather [a Norwegian, PB], which happened to be the name I'd picked out for boy when I was sixteen, many years before I met my DH. :zen

The younger has a first name we just liked and my mother's maiden name for a middle name.

Kurtz
01-06-2008, 11:14 AM
:lol

I love my son's names, they are not on the top ten, but not unrecognizable, either. The older one is named after his great-grandfather [a Norwegian, PB], which happened to be the name I'd picked out for boy when I was sixteen, many years before I met my DH. :zen

The younger has a first name we just liked and my mother's maiden name for a middle name.


My partner's kid has an androgynous first name, we had his middle
name changed coz I thought it was too wussie 'n he agreed. :lol

His first name is his mother's middle name.

Kurtz
01-06-2008, 11:21 AM
Ya know, the more I think about it, the way we got on the subject of name change was coz he was whinin' he didn't like his first name until his mother got out this biography of a famous historian 'n pointed out to him that he was named after him coz it was a family name passed thru the family. My partner always said her dad didn't like her, but I always countered with hey, your brothers 'n sisters didn't get the family name in theirs. :lol Anyway, the kid was proud of his first name then so we moved on to that damn wussie name his dad gave him 'n changed it. :lol

GreenEyedLady
01-06-2008, 11:50 AM
I like the names I chose for my three. I never liked my name. I liked my middle name better. My mother gave me her middle name. I gave my oldest daughter my middle name thinking I would be starting a tradition. My daughter didn't keep the tradition going. My son has his fathers middle name.

My sister gave her daughter her middle name. Her daughter is due the end of next month and will be passing the middle name on in her daughter. (they know it's a girl)