Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Names don’t “cause problems”. People who use your name to judge and shun you are the problem.
Yes, people who do that are a problem, I agree. But some names do cause problems, by being easily misspelled, easily mistaken for another name, hard for people where you live to pronounce, having vulgar meanings in another language, etc.
For instance, the name Beatrice was on our short list. I love the name, its history, and I especially love the Italian pronunciation (BAY-ah-TREE-chay -- we are both 2nd generation Italian Americans and both have Italian first and last names). But I knew if we used it, living in the US, it would be a pain to use the Italian pronunciation -- everyone is either going to pronounce with with English/American pronunciation (BEE-ah-tris), or some Spanish-speakers might pronounce it like Beatriz (BAY-ah-trees). People would find the Italian pronunciation either annoyingly foreign or just counterintuitive. So she would have been called by the Italian pronunciation at home and by family, and then one of two other pronunciation elsewhere, and she'd have to decide when and if to correct people as she got older.
I still love that name, and when I meet people with it, I have warm feelings. No judgment or shunning! But I viewed it as a name that could "cause problems" for my kid, so decided against it.