Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 38 and one of my mom's sisters has mis-pronounced my name my entire life. She is bizarre and weird and quirky and all those things. My mom says she corrected her for a few years and just gave up. I don't know how she doesn't hear that everyone else pronounces it
Elizabeth (with the "I" pronounced like "it")
And she insists on saying
Eleeeeezabeth
Maybe this doesn't help your situation but she may just be tone deaf or clueless or really bad with names
You would be surprised how many people can't hear the difference between Laura and Lora.
Anonymous wrote:Have your kids write thank you notes and tart writing HER name funny - Beatryce instead of Beatrice and see what she does.
If you have to write out her name for anything, write it wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a step-grandma who is doing the same type of strange things. It took us a while to see she is starting to get dementia, at 90. To be fair, she was always sharp with her words to us but now she has an excuse.
OP here - she's not even 65 yet. My dad remarried a younger woman when I was less than 5. Still, I'm planning to let go of the annoyance part (ignore ignore ignore) but raise it as a joke to my siblings (her children) to see if it gets corrected for the kids' sake.
I have the step grandma in her 90s. Yours doesn't have that excuse if she's under 65. I think you are handling it right with you plan. I can tell you that I'm not bothered by the stuff mine says anymore but my own parents still get mad. It's from years of listening to her jabs and passive aggressive comments. It got worse once my grandfather died years ago before the dementia kicked in. Sorry you are going through this, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a step-grandma who is doing the same type of strange things. It took us a while to see she is starting to get dementia, at 90. To be fair, she was always sharp with her words to us but now she has an excuse.
OP here - she's not even 65 yet. My dad remarried a younger woman when I was less than 5. Still, I'm planning to let go of the annoyance part (ignore ignore ignore) but raise it as a joke to my siblings (her children) to see if it gets corrected for the kids' sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a step-grandma who is doing the same type of strange things. It took us a while to see she is starting to get dementia, at 90. To be fair, she was always sharp with her words to us but now she has an excuse.
OP here - she's not even 65 yet. My dad remarried a younger woman when I was less than 5. Still, I'm planning to let go of the annoyance part (ignore ignore ignore) but raise it as a joke to my siblings (her children) to see if it gets corrected for the kids' sake.
Anonymous wrote:If it's truly a mistake/unintentional/age-related, then ignoring the mistake is the kind thing to do.
If it is on purpose/petty/a dig, then you cheerfully ignoring it is absolutely the best "revenge".
So you've got your course of action either way: ignore, ignore, ignore