Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL "stole" my mom's grandmother name. It's so irritating. And it actually became confusing to my daughter. At least before when she was "grammy" and my mom was "nana" we could keep them separate. Now my MIL, kind of out of nowhere, decides she also wants to be nana. It's insane. I don't care in that she can be whatever she wants, but I care in that it's now confusing.
Why not call them Nana Sue and Nana Betty?
Anonymous wrote:My MIL "stole" my mom's grandmother name. It's so irritating. And it actually became confusing to my daughter. At least before when she was "grammy" and my mom was "nana" we could keep them separate. Now my MIL, kind of out of nowhere, decides she also wants to be nana. It's insane. I don't care in that she can be whatever she wants, but I care in that it's now confusing.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't bubbie or bubby a Jewish thing? I believe all of my friends who refer to their grandmothers like that are Jewish.
My own mother who is not yet a grandmother has decided that she is too young and stylish to be called grandma, nana, granny, Grammy or anything like that. She is 65. She has decided that all future grandchildren will call her YaYa. And no, we aren't Greek. DH and I think she's being a fool and he has vowed to instruct our future hypothetical children to refer to her as Old Mother Time, or OMT for short.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't stand made up grandma names. My one grandma wanted to be called "Gaga" and all my cousins called her that. I refused as a 2 year old and have called her "grandma" ever since. I giggle every time my 30 year old cousins say "Gaga".
Aw. My neighbor, who was an adopted grandmother to me and my brothers, was called Gaga and then Gagy (pronounced gaa-gee, with hard g's) by us and later the whole neighborhood. She started calling herself that because she was convinced that my brother said "gagagagaga" only for her. When she died at 99 years old, none of the kids for four decades in our neighborhood knew of her as anything but Gagy. It was sweet.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't bubbie or bubby a Jewish thing? I believe all of my friends who refer to their grandmothers like that are Jewish.
My own mother who is not yet a grandmother has decided that she is too young and stylish to be called grandma, nana, granny, Grammy or anything like that. She is 65. She has decided that all future grandchildren will call her YaYa. And no, we aren't Greek. DH and I think she's being a fool and he has vowed to instruct our future hypothetical children to refer to her as Old Mother Time, or OMT for short.
Anonymous wrote:I can't stand made up grandma names. My one grandma wanted to be called "Gaga" and all my cousins called her that. I refused as a 2 year old and have called her "grandma" ever since. I giggle every time my 30 year old cousins say "Gaga".
Anonymous wrote:I can't stand made up grandma names. My one grandma wanted to be called "Gaga" and all my cousins called her that. I refused as a 2 year old and have called her "grandma" ever since. I giggle every time my 30 year old cousins say "Gaga".