Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't have to pick a name beforehand-- I always wanted to meet the baby first so we went with a shortlist
this is what we did, as well. Took a list of 2-3 names with us and decided at the hospital.
and I also agree that there really is no difference to me on these names. Both traditional. And super popular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this some kind of personality disorder? These people who are obsessed with the idea that every baby must get a unique, rare name? That if your child shares a name with other children it means you have ruined your child’s life. Although honestly, many of these comments aren’t even about the baby. It’s more like you’re all mad because OP and people like her have failed to entertain you or interest you with their name choices. Why is that important? If you don’t hear a novel baby name every day, you’re mad? I do not get it.
I can’t figure out another explanation for why there are 8 pages of comments berating OP for wanting to use one of two popular (and pretty!) baby names, when one of the first things OP said was “I know they are popular.”
Seriously, she knows. She doesn’t care— these are the names she likes. Do you honestly think she or her child would be better off if she picked some name that she didn’t feel connected to or didn’t like as well? Think this through. You are all being insane. Stop trying to shove your values onto someone who doesn’t share them, and maybe take a minute to ask yourself why “giving babies original names” is so important to you. I think a lot of you need therapy because this is honestly weird.
People are just cautioning OP not to saddle her daughter with a fad name. And that’s all Sophia and Charlotte are - names that are current fad. No is is saying name her something made up or unique - just not a name where there will be millions with her first name in her generation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this some kind of personality disorder? These people who are obsessed with the idea that every baby must get a unique, rare name? That if your child shares a name with other children it means you have ruined your child’s life. Although honestly, many of these comments aren’t even about the baby. It’s more like you’re all mad because OP and people like her have failed to entertain you or interest you with their name choices. Why is that important? If you don’t hear a novel baby name every day, you’re mad? I do not get it.
I can’t figure out another explanation for why there are 8 pages of comments berating OP for wanting to use one of two popular (and pretty!) baby names, when one of the first things OP said was “I know they are popular.”
Seriously, she knows. She doesn’t care— these are the names she likes. Do you honestly think she or her child would be better off if she picked some name that she didn’t feel connected to or didn’t like as well? Think this through. You are all being insane. Stop trying to shove your values onto someone who doesn’t share them, and maybe take a minute to ask yourself why “giving babies original names” is so important to you. I think a lot of you need therapy because this is honestly weird.
People are just cautioning OP not to saddle her daughter with a fad name. And that’s all Sophia and Charlotte are - names that are current fad. No is is saying name her something made up or unique - just not a name where there will be millions with her first name in her generation.
Anonymous wrote:Is this some kind of personality disorder? These people who are obsessed with the idea that every baby must get a unique, rare name? That if your child shares a name with other children it means you have ruined your child’s life. Although honestly, many of these comments aren’t even about the baby. It’s more like you’re all mad because OP and people like her have failed to entertain you or interest you with their name choices. Why is that important? If you don’t hear a novel baby name every day, you’re mad? I do not get it.
I can’t figure out another explanation for why there are 8 pages of comments berating OP for wanting to use one of two popular (and pretty!) baby names, when one of the first things OP said was “I know they are popular.”
Seriously, she knows. She doesn’t care— these are the names she likes. Do you honestly think she or her child would be better off if she picked some name that she didn’t feel connected to or didn’t like as well? Think this through. You are all being insane. Stop trying to shove your values onto someone who doesn’t share them, and maybe take a minute to ask yourself why “giving babies original names” is so important to you. I think a lot of you need therapy because this is honestly weird.
Anonymous wrote:Heather redux.
Charlotte has more class.
Sophie is a nickname in itself. It’s Sophia.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with PP. I don’t love super popular names but the OP doesn’t mind and there’s nothing wrong with that. Beats naming her kid something made up or ~KrEaTyVe~
Anonymous wrote:
Wait, Sophie isn’t the female version of Sophocles?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So is charlotte.Anonymous wrote:Sophie is overused.
Why don't people say this about boys names? Everyone I Greg up with was named Matt or Ryan. Who cares.
I care. The Ryan-explosion was ridiculous about 20 years ago especially in my Jewish school.
Personally, I do an internal eye roll when someone tells me their child’s name and it’s ridiculously popular.
You need to take a hard look at why you care so much about what other people name their kids. Seriously, what a nasty way to go though life. Find some inner happiness and you might not be such a negative hag.
Oh you can learn to stop being a sheep and actually think about your child’s name. If you think I’m the only one who hears “”Sophia” and doesn’t think, “”yeah, you’re that type”, you are dead wrong.
I assure you, no one but you is thinking anyone is a sheep for naming a girl a pretty, currently popular name. This is a very modern, dare I say very you, problem when you consider that for decades the most popular girls name was Mary and I don’t think our foremothers were worried that their Mary would meet someone and their name would make that person think their parents were “a type”. New hobby time for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both are super popular. DH wanted to name our baby Sophia and I wanted a different name. When we asked opinions of the nurses at the hospital, everyone basically said, “Not another Sophia!”. We went with my choice with Sophia as a middle name.
During the big Ava fad 15 years ago, some poor woman told my grandmother that her baby’s name was Ava and my grandmother said, “well of course it is”.
She is my hero
+1.