To op- do you also say mommy?
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I don't remember calling him Daddy; it was always Dad.
Also, a grown adult should not use baby talk, particularly at work. |
I mean, generally these kinds of traditions are passed down in families, yes. And it's cultural/regional as well. |
But Latinos also often call their children Mami/papi which people never do in English so not really an equivalent comparison |
+100 |
I talk to my mother a lot on the phone. Once in awhile, she'll put my dad on, and I always say, "hi, daddy!" Thoroughout conversation, I think I just say "dad." I usually call my mother "mom" but sometimes say "mommy."
My college-aged daughter calls me mommy. Her teacher in middle school once heard her call me that and said, "oh, that's so sweet." She's kind of a loud-mouth kid, so I don't think he ever saw her sweet side. My high-schooler daughter calls me "mother" We're not southern (New Yorkers by birth; kids are DC by birth) |
My father is truly my best friend. Yes, he’s “Hi Daddy!” otherwise it’s dad. |
Myself and my kids are quite independent, one doc one lawyer, they still call their dad, daddy and me, mommy. What you known is quite limited so you should STFU. |
No. Stopped that when I was 6 yo
Then he was Dad. Now he is grandpa. |
Personally I find it weird, my dad was never "daddy" to me, certainly not after the age of 3 or so.
I was super taken aback when I lived in the deep south for a few years and would her grown men calling their father "daddy." It sounds immature and implies a willful subservience that I would never want for myself or my own kids. |
Why do you call him grandpa if he is your dad? |
Maybe there were some uncomfortable family secrets revealed in PP's adulthood. |
Why would you equate the word “Daddy” with subservience? Sounds like YOU have “Daddy issues”. It’s a term of endearment, nothing more. |
Oh, don't be coy. You know full well the connotations of the word, since you used a common phrase exemplifying those connotations that didn't appear in my post at all. It's perfectly fine for it to be a term of endearment. I'm not going around casting Freudian aspersions on people who use it. But because it is the most childish of all of the options that exist for a relationship that is literally the definition of paternalistic, I do think that it has that implication. |
I call my dad daddy. I'm in my 40s. We are very close |