DH has two younger sisters with children the same ages as our two youngest kids. They also started out calling them Grandma and Grandpa years ago. One SIL has a MIL who goes by Mimi as well, but she has been going by that name since before SIL had her two kids. I suppose MIL could have borrowed the name from her, but I don't know. I guess the kids could have started calling her that too but where did Papa come from as SIL's MIL is a widow. |
My parents changed their names after my DC1 was born. They had older grandchildren who called the Grandma and Grandpa but my child went with another unusual term and it stuck. |
Why is this only a thing for grandparents to have a "name"?? Parents don't seem to have special names like this. IMO grandma and grandpa have a definition.
My MIL is trying for "Gigi" but that's a dog name in my opinion. |
My step-mother changed her "grandma name" at least three times, because she wanted to make sure it was one that my half-brother (her child) and his wife would use when they have kids. My eldest DS now just calls her "that lady with Pawpaw." I always correct him and chuckle a little bit internally, ![]() |
I find this amusing.
They didn't give an explanation? |
I think it's like all the millennial hipster dads wanting to be called "papa" instead or "dad" or "daddy". They want to seem cool, young and fresh and grandma and grandpa seems old to them. |
Hi, Op
It may be strange but, I would start calling them the names they now want to be called. Think of a kid who was known as "Billy" and now wants to go as "Will" Would you be the one aunt or sister who insisted that they are "Billy" no matter what? But, they were Billy for twenty years! Mind you, I wouldn't do what they are doing but, it doesn't hurt anyone and how often do you directly say, "Grandma, pass the salt?" If the kids mess up, than no biggie but, I would try to go with the flow. |
OP here, thanks for the feedback. It is weird but if they want to be called Mimi and Papa. I am not going to fight it or encourage my kids to stay with Grandma/Grandpa. I have known them for more than half my life now and still don't get them. This is a minor thing, just funny. |
If it's the Williamsburg VA area, very trendy in the general area. Grandparents don't want to be seen as "old" and all four (or more) grandparents must have their own unique nickname. |
My FIL made a big deal out of what his name was, wanted me to have the right of refusal, heard that my parents "are allowed to pick first" because they are the maternal grandparents. I was polite but had to wonder what kind of drama went down in his friend's families if they'd filled his head with all that nonsense protocol. |
Interesting, all the gigi' I've know are only that name as great grandma's "GG" |
Agree. Not southern at all. MaMaw and PaPaw are southern. Although we are from Mississippi and our grandbaby calls us Grammy and Granddaddy. |
I always thought it was a Jewish or maybe Yiddish thing. The branch of my family that is Jewish uses these names for the wife's parents. |
+1 They have every right to determine how they wish to be addressed. Yes, even if they started as something else. |
Sure, but wouldn't it be normal for them to explain it or at the least, mention it? |