Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
Anonymous wrote:This seems really weird? Is it only women?
I've never heard of using a different name at work v. home -- unless it's a different name in the sense that some groups just call you one thing and some another, or you have a name like... Fifi or Cookie or something at home.
Anonymous wrote:This seems really weird? Is it only women?
I've never heard of using a different name at work v. home -- unless it's a different name in the sense that some groups just call you one thing and some another, or you have a name like... Fifi or Cookie or something at home.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
I'm 47 and gave all my kids names that can be manipulated. Zack never introduces himself as Zachary even though that's what his diploma says and what his company's website says. I never even called him Zachary when I was angry at him. Alexandra goes by Ali with her friends and coworkers. Family calls her Alex. One of my friends full first name is Bambi. That's just ... her real first name. You'd take her more seriously than Zack? Just call people what they want to be called. You get to control what YOU are called. Anonymous wrote:My name is Elizabeth, I go by Elizabeth, sign all my emails as Elizabeth and yet half of the office calls me Liz, even after being corrected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
I am 57 and use my nickname probably 98% of the time. My brother is 64 and same with him. I know quite a few people in their 50's through 70's who almost exclusively use their nicknames.
I actually think that the most common age of people who are like you are recent college grads from their 20's to early 30's. These are people who want to go into the work world and be respected, and they feel that nicknames are ways that older people show less respect for them because of their youth. They feel that diminutive nicknames are condescending and demeaning, so they insist on being called their full name. I've known a few people like this who then carried it to the point of doing what you did, which is giving their children names for which there are no nicknames.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
Anonymous wrote:Peg and Peggy is Margaret and a lot of foreign born people don’t get it.
I find it amusing when people use completely fake names at work.
At one point I had three women working for me who used American nickname and maiden last name at work.
Meanwhile legally they took they’re husbands last name and had a real first name. And I had one that did opposite kept maiden name but used husbands last name.
One was a raging lunatic we had to fire.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?