Anonymous wrote:OP hasn't returned yet. Trolling accomplished?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why grandpa is unacceptable for many older men, who feel the need to come up with some other name for themselves. I think the variants started for multi-generational families, and kids giving pet names but now no one wants to be just grandpa. This includes my own FIL who calls himself Papa, but it did not get traction and everyone still calls him grandpa.
My family has used the name "Papa" for four generations now to refer to our grandfathers. My father did not suddenly invent it.
Anonymous wrote:Papa is Dad in French. Not appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why grandpa is unacceptable for many older men, who feel the need to come up with some other name for themselves. I think the variants started for multi-generational families, and kids giving pet names but now no one wants to be just grandpa. This includes my own FIL who calls himself Papa, but it did not get traction and everyone still calls him grandpa.
Anonymous wrote:Papa is Dad in French. Not appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Papa is Dad in French. Not appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:My kids call paternal Grandpa Papa 'insert last name" and I don't have a problem with it. But, English is not my first language so I never though much about it. It started with older cousins in Colorado. DH didn't think anything of it, I didn't even know until now that in some parts of US father is called papa, I knew in France, but I am not French.
Anonymous wrote:Wow OP this is not the bridge you want to die on. It's what ever the grandparents want to be called.
Anonymous wrote:I can't picture a modern-day child calling their immediate father "Papa" past age 3, when they get to preschool and the other kids make fun of them for not using "Dad".
I can, however, picture LOTS of grandfather "Papa"s. Sounds like a great grandpa name.