| Follow up: does this term grate on anyone else besides me? I have no rational explanation for my annoyance, but there you have it. |
| Never heard it but if I did I would laugh. |
| I started using it when I had what I think of as the second set of kids, and they were "little" but old enough to object to being called "the babies." So now we call them "the littles." |
| I think people who do this are too drunk to remember their kids names. |
|
I noticed my Mormon friends using the term, and then when they had older kids and babies- it became 'littles' and 'bigs'.
I think it started as a Mormon mom blog thing. |
| I have a friend on the west coast who has used this term for my kids. She sometimes likes to be overly cutesy in the way she talks so I figured it was something she made up. Have never heard anyone else say it. It fits my friend and she uses it as a term of endearment, so not that grating. |
| I have a friend who uses it a lot, and I find it a bit annoying but whatever, not a big deal. I also am irritated by women who call themselves "mamas" but you know, live and let live. |
| Haven't heard this term. |
| We have a larger family with an age gap and DH and I do refer to the two young ones as the Littles... Out of their earshot. |
| Everyone? |
| Haven't people distinguished between "little kids" and "big kids" for forever? |
Yes, we had "littles" and "bigs" on our block 40 years ago. This doesn't bother me. "Kiddos," however, drives me nuts. |
The vernacular goes with "crunchy mama," which is that particularly narcissistic species of mother who thinks everything she does for her baby is endlessly fascinating, remarkable, and worth blogging about. |
| I'm vaguely aware of the term but have never heard it used IRL. |
| Also with "crunch mama" and "littles" goes "nurslings." |