Spinoff:what is your name and do you like it?

Anonymous
Karen. I've always hated my name. My childhood dog and older sibling both had names that start with K, so it was really Kutesy. My mother claimed she didn't realize but when we asked what her alternates were, they were Mark and Michelle. I always wished I'd been given a name that lends itself easily to a nickname. I also never felt that my name was pretty or cool in any way.
Anonymous
Wow, I'm the third Karen on this thread (late 30s).

I loved it as a kid. There were a couple others in high school, so it wasn't an anomoly. Everyone has always been able to spell it/prounce it easily. My parents called me Carebear which was super 80s and cute.

I hate what the internet has done to it though. I now have to almost apologize for it when I introduce myself. I've debated starting to go by my middle name but I still love it at heart.
Anonymous

Jodi. I like the name, but I've never felt like a "Jodi."

For some reason I feel like a Kathy, a name I don't really care for.

Anonymous
Anneli. I like it, but a few spell it correctly when they hear it.
Anonymous
Allison. It's fine. I prefer my nickname.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Karen. I've always hated my name. My childhood dog and older sibling both had names that start with K, so it was really Kutesy. My mother claimed she didn't realize but when we asked what her alternates were, they were Mark and Michelle. I always wished I'd been given a name that lends itself easily to a nickname. I also never felt that my name was pretty or cool in any way.

My friend, Karen, is nicknamed Karey or Kary.
Anonymous
I have an ethnic, hard to spell, hard to pronounce name. When pronounced and spelled correctly, it is a cool name. I hated it growing up, but I grew to love it in college.
Anonymous
No total 80s name. Swore I’d change it when o got to be 18, but then other things got in the way. By the time I was changing my name in court from a divorce, I was used to it though I don’t like it.
Anonymous
Interesting how many of you don't want to state your name.

Christin, but pronounced Christine. German, so the e on the end would result in a different pronunciation (Chris-tee-neh). Now that I'm in the US it's annoying to have to correct everyone from Chris-ton.
Anonymous
Christina - love it. In childhood I was nicknamed Tina. Not because my parents really liked that nickname, I had have an Uncle Chris confused my older brother, he who thought they were saying, "Chris' Tina". So I was called MY Tina, and then Tina. The minute I left for college, I became Christina. I tried it out in high school, but could only get minimal traction.

With that in mind, I did have conversation with my teens to see how they felt about their name, and if they would prefer to go by a nickname or middle name. I'm happy to call any one the name that they prefer.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Christina - love it. In childhood I was nicknamed Tina. Not because my parents really liked that nickname, I had have an Uncle Chris confused my older brother, he who thought they were saying, "Chris' Tina". So I was called MY Tina, and then Tina. The minute I left for college, I became Christina. I tried it out in high school, but could only get minimal traction.

With that in mind, I did have conversation with my teens to see how they felt about their name, and if they would prefer to go by a nickname or middle name. I'm happy to call any one the name that they prefer.


MY Tina is so cute.
Anonymous
Sophie. It's fine.
Anonymous
It is so weird how names just go out of fashion. No one names their kids Betty, Alice, Carl, or Frank etc anymore.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Heather. Best I can tell, we'll be extinct once all the millenials die.


It might come back once millennials start having grandkids.


My grandma Charlotte would have agreed. Only Charlotte in my life ever.

Then my same age cousin named her daughter Charlotte after my Grandma (or that was just plausible deniability re: Sex and the City).

Then later came Princess Charlotte.
Anonymous
My name is Dawn. I was born in the late '60s and when I graduated high school in the mid-80's there were 5 of us in my class. I like my name. It is short, so I've never had a nickname except my grandma used to add an "ie" to it when I was little. When I started my first job, my colleagues told me that they assumed my parents must have been hippies. (They were not)
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