By KATE HUNTER
Just when we thought we’d seen it all when it came to baby names, a new trend is emerging: the optimistically descriptive name such as Stunner, Mighty, Joyous or Rogue. Like racehorse names, but for people.
I get why people do it. We all have dreams for our kids, but I think it’s a risky way to choose a name.
I remember when our first daughter was born, my husband said, ‘I like the name Grace.’
‘Me too,’ I replied, ‘But what if she’s like me? You know, clumsy. Not graceful. Then it’s like a bad joke.’
It was disappointing how quickly he accepted that.
I think it’s dancing with disaster to saddle a baby with a name that’s a descriptor. There’s too much that can go wrong. You might call your baby girl Jazz, a nod to your love of the genre, but odds are she’ll end up loving death metal and hating you.
For a while now, people have been naming their babies after cities and stones and trees and birds. Every class will have its share of Sequoias and Phoenixs and Sapphires – no big deal. Sapphire might be the Susan of a new generation. I don’t much like it, but I accept it.
But there’s new, far more worrying trend emerging. Some people, regular people, are choosing names like ‘King,’ ‘Prince,’ and for the little ladies, ‘Princess.’
Even scarier, some are going for ‘Greatness,’ ‘Awesome,’ and, ‘Magical’.
A few have even opted for ‘Messiah,’ but with mixed success. One family in Tennessee was ordered to change their son’s name. The judge said,
Top Comments
What really irks me is the trend to name your twins with either rhyming names or starting with the same letter. Why? They have to forever live with people comparing them because they are twins and they will be fighting to be individuals as it is so why would people want to make this harder for them by naming them similar names? I have heard Ian and Owen, Lexy and Lacy, Oliver and Olivia, Moonlight and sunlight just to name a few.
My daughter's middle name is jazz.... awkward.