Anonymous wrote:As someone who goes by their middle name because I have an unpronounceable (by Americans) first name, it has been a huge pain in the ass my entire life. So much so that I dropped my first name when I got married and moved my middle name to my first name spot.
Anonymous wrote:If you never actually use the first name, why would it matter if it sounded better? No one ever hears it.
My DH and his brother are called by their middle names rather than their first names and really hate the hassle.
Anonymous wrote:My thinking is: if you're only planning to call them one name at a time, the "it sounds better in this order" thing is NOWHERE NEAR as big a deal in real life as it is when you're doing name-picking exercises while pregnant. It will almost never be said, in either direction, so it doesn't really matter. Put the name you're going to use first and be done with it.
You might think Jennifer Lynn sounds better than Lynn Jennifer, but if you're going to call her Lynn either way it doesn't matter. In middle school she'll say "my middle name is Jennifer, after my grandma" and one of her friends will say "that was my grandma's name too!" and they'll move on. It won't be weird that her middle name doesn't "flow" because no one will say it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did exactly this. It’s really not a big deal and not “aggravating” at all. A lot of people go by middle names or nicknames with no problem.
I’m more interested in the kid’s POV on this. My parents gave me a variant spelling of a common name and from their perspective it has never caused even a moment’s hassle.
Anonymous wrote:We did exactly this. It’s really not a big deal and not “aggravating” at all. A lot of people go by middle names or nicknames with no problem.