Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should tell your daughter.
I would hate to name my child the same name as my father’s affair partner. Yuck! If she ever finds out she will feel betrayed by YOU as well.
+1
Anonymous wrote:If you really can’t move past it, tell your DD a white lie that when you were younger (true), someone with this name causes you unbearable emotional pain that you haven’t healed from (true). Your DH should say that he knows this. Just stay vague.
She might change it.
Anonymous wrote:I can tell my dad dislikes DD10's name, and he's never said why. He calls her nicknames that are correct for her name but only an old person would use them. It's fine.
Anonymous wrote:How does DH feel about his grandchild's name?
I think DH should have the conversation about the affair with your DD.
Anonymous wrote:You should tell your daughter.
I would hate to name my child the same name as my father’s affair partner. Yuck! If she ever finds out she will feel betrayed by YOU as well.
Anonymous wrote:It’s been 18 years since my husband had an affair, and I literally can’t remember her name any more (although it was DEVASTATING). But if my mom asked me to change my child’s name, I’d still remember that. The AP was never the problem, OP. Let her go.
Anonymous wrote:Girl, I'd say something- that this is the name of a person who inflicted pain upon you and it's the one name you cannot hear without the pain coming up. (This IS the only name, right? You get one veto).
You sucked it up and were a martyr the first time. Being a martyr again- and for the rest of your life is not worth it.
To those who suggest calling the child by some random nickname/made up name other than the legal name- this might work for some but is not done in our families so that would be off the table.
Anonymous wrote:Don't send your pain down the generations
Get help to deal with the affair and call your granddaughter Baby, Sweetie, or Honey or whatever you want until you can handle her name.
Having experienced a traumatic birth, let me tell you, you can't be sure of her safety arriving until she is safety in her mother's arms. And at that point you will be do freaking grateful, you won't care what they call her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is tough, OP, but I honestly think once you meet your grandchild, that hatred will melt away.
same. the association will be with your granddaughter after a while.