Anonymous wrote:Growing up in the Midwest my wife called here parents Amma and Papa. She wants our son to call them that too. I've never heard anyone call a grandfather Papa. I think southerners or people in rural areas may use some variant but not straight Papa. To me it's no different than calling him Dad. It seems incredibly inappropriate and even implies something incestuous between him and his daughter. She doesn't see it. I think that the fact that she called them these things is evidence enough that they are names for parents but she doesn't see it. What's the best way to handle this? We are all together for the week and I feel done after only 24 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously wife would not allow child to call your mother mama.
Lots of people.call their moms "Mama"
Nobody actually calls their dads "Papa". Papa is used for grandpas, not fathers.
The only time people use "papa" to refer to a dad are in old cliches like "Mama's baby. Papa's maybe?"
Anonymous wrote:You can buy other's day cards for grandparents that say Papa. I know, because I buy them.
Anonymous wrote:Growing up in the Midwest my wife called here parents Amma and Papa. She wants our son to call them that too. I've never heard anyone call a grandfather Papa. I think southerners or people in rural areas may use some variant but not straight Papa. To me it's no different than calling him Dad. It seems incredibly inappropriate and even implies something incestuous between him and his daughter. She doesn't see it. I think that the fact that she called them these things is evidence enough that they are names for parents but she doesn't see it. What's the best way to handle this? We are all together for the week and I feel done after only 24 hours.
Anonymous wrote:I'd be creeped out by this.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously wife would not allow child to call your mother mama.