Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reality is your kid ultimately decides what they want to be called.
We never used the common nickname for our firstborn, we always called them by their full name. After a week in pre-K they started going by the shortened nickname (easier to write). I’m literally the only person who ever says the full name.
I know several moms who picked long, beautiful names and swore their kids would never go by a nickname. Lol. They all go by the common nicknames their moms hoped to avoid.
By childhood names are you talking about cutesy names that aren’t traditional names? Like Skip, Pooh Bear, etc?
I know legit adults whose families and childhood friends call them Pooh Bear, etc. But they don’t go by such names at work.
I know a kid like this. Mother gave the child a long three syllable (but relatively common) first name. Father picked middle name which is short and unique. Mother calls him by long first name. Father calls him by short middle name. Friends call him by nickname of long first name. He prefers the nickname. But as he's only 10, he's just learned to be adaptable and answer to everything.
Anonymous wrote:Well, duh. Jonathan becomes Jon. Samantha becomes Sam. Jennifer becomes Jen.
The only person who still uses the formal name is...Mom.
Everyone else adult kids knows calls adult kid by the short version of their name.
This is everyone I know. Myself included.
It's a story as old as time. When I hear the moms of toddlers saying Alexander, I think to myself "that kid's going to be Alex to this friends, only Mom will call him Alexander." That's life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just wish my own parents would stop calling themselves Bunny and Dick.
My parents had very good friends named Dick and Bunny, both deceased now. They were lovely people, so thanks for making me think of them today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This wouldn't fly in DeSantis' Florida, schools there now have to get parents to indicate on a form what their children are allowed to be called and if it's not listed then they must be called by their birth certificate name at school, no nicknames or preferred names.
The idea is to prevent students from asking staff to call them by their preferred name as they attempt to transition or begin that process, all without parental consent and knowledge.
How are Florida schools compelling young adults not to use their chosen names?
Anonymous wrote:My MIL insists on using DH’s full name even though he prefers a nickname. And has repeatedly told her.
So they don’t talk much. You reap what you sow.
Anonymous wrote:I just wish my own parents would stop calling themselves Bunny and Dick.
Anonymous wrote:I have a relative that changed his name. His birth name didn't suit him nor did it match his personality. He preferred to be called by his middle name but was annoyed when official things referenced his first name. So he changed it.
There were hurt feelings but in the end it's not a big deal. My sister can't name people. All her kids have weird names.
Anonymous wrote:The reality is your kid ultimately decides what they want to be called.
We never used the common nickname for our firstborn, we always called them by their full name. After a week in pre-K they started going by the shortened nickname (easier to write). I’m literally the only person who ever says the full name.
I know several moms who picked long, beautiful names and swore their kids would never go by a nickname. Lol. They all go by the common nicknames their moms hoped to avoid.
By childhood names are you talking about cutesy names that aren’t traditional names? Like Skip, Pooh Bear, etc?
I know legit adults whose families and childhood friends call them Pooh Bear, etc. But they don’t go by such names at work.