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how did you feel about your birth name as a child?

Started by kittylover, November 12, 2014, 09:37:17 AM

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Jill F

I was indifferent to it as a kid, but I grew to hate it.  When I was around 11-12, I actually asked my mother what my name would have been if I was FAAB.  I probably would have been a Juliana now, but my sister got that one when I was 14.  I took Gillian, the anglicized version of that name that was also derived from my given name.

G------ -illia- ------n

Plus every Jill I've met was awesome.
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Sammy

The short version of my birth name would be exactly the same as my chosen female name - Emi or Emy (I am teaching my daughter to call me like that cause it causes waaay less awkward situations than "dad"). So, Emy is fine for me :).
Now, there was quite a long period when I went by nickname "Cain" (epitome of my image of masculinity made to purge those weird feelings of wanting to be born girl)  - all my friends and acquaintances called me like that. Well, I cant really identify with that anymore as "Cain" seems entirely different person.
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big kim

Didn't mind it but not many girls are called Jimmy!
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JenLotus

I disliked it in favour of my middle name, which started with a J. About the time I was 11 I had created my online persona as Jen and that stuck better than D ever did.
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mac1

I was not called by my birth name as a child until I started school. As I got older I disliked my childhood nickname but some family members continued to call me by it. I was very reluctant to tell anybody my birth middle name as it is more traditionally a girl's name (Allison). Later I would have liked my birth first to also have been either a unisex or girl's name too.
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Mariah

The birth name was basically unisex since both men and women have been named Michael, but didn't grow to truly dislike tell after I started transitioning. I did truly hate it when people used to refer to me as Mike. I always hated that.
Mariah
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Sephirah

Quote from: Mariah2014 on November 12, 2014, 07:52:52 PM
The birth name was basically unisex since both men and women have been named Michael, but didn't grow to truly dislike tell after I started transitioning. I did truly hate it when people used to refer to me as Mike. I always hated that.
Mariah

Lol, I hated that too. I always thought it referred to something that should be on a stand, which people speak into. Not a person.
Natura nihil frustra facit.

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Mariah

Exactly.
Mariah
Quote from: Sephirah on November 12, 2014, 08:01:44 PM
Lol, I hated that too. I always thought it referred to something that should be on a stand, which people speak into. Not a person.
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I am also spouse of a transgender person.
Retired News Administrator
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Jo-is-amazing

My birthname was pretty awful tbh. I like Johanna Rose so much more :D
I am the self proclaimed Queen of procrastination
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Dierdre Lenore

Birth name Gilbert.... Standard name, Bert.... Ughhhh... Pansy is way more fun.
P
Work it in to work it out!

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Rachel

When I was taking my drivers test in Pennsylvania, USA, it was administered by a PA State Trooper. He checked my license application and said is that how you spell your middle name? I looked and I spelled it Michelle. The trooper looked like a Marine Drill Sargent and I had long hair and tight jeans. I changed the name on the ID application.

Just so you do not get the wrong impression, the driving test trooper was female and 1/2 way through the test I stopped to look at the ducks flying south and we talked about the ducks for a minute.  I passed the test without a problem and had a nice time doing it :)
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Ash

My birth name has always just felt wrong. Especially whenever I see it written down on a form or in some message or whatever especially.
Kind of flinch when someone calls me Tom. Never understood it growing up.

Although thankfully I don't think I have ever been in a place where I have been the only Tom and I usually get some other nickname or something.
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Daisy Jane

Quote from: Carrie Liz on November 12, 2014, 11:04:44 AM
As a kid, I was just kind of meh on it. I was more or less okay with my nickname, "Charlie." That name didn't bother me so much. However, I have always NEVER been a fan of what my actual legal birth name was, "Charles." It wasn't until I was an adult that I started hating my nickname too.



In French class in 2nd grade, we had to find French names for ourselves. And I was really disappointed that, while other kids got to pick different names because their names weren't on the list of French names, the name "Charles" was on the list. I refused to go by "Charles," so I actually opted to go by "Claus" instead.

I remember a specific incident in music class in 3rd grade where we were clapping out the syllables in our names with "ta"s and "ti-ti"s. In my own head, I had a four-syllable "ta ta ta ta" pattern planned out, and I liked how even it sounded. But when the music teacher got around to me, she messed it up by using my legal name, and it became "ta (rest) ta ta," and I whined about how that didn't sound right.

In middle school, I remember having several episodes where all of a sudden I'd be looking at my name on paper, and all of a sudden the name "Charlie" just started looking completely weird. (I don't know how many people have these episodes, where all of a sudden when you think of how the letters in a particular word are spelled, and how they all somehow strangely come together to mean a certain thing, it just all seems completely ridiculous for a few seconds? I had a lot of those episodes with my name. Again, though, it's not like I disliked my name, it's just that I didn't ever really like it either, it was just the name I was given.)



Then, as an adult, I slowly started hating my nickname too. Because dear God, the sheer amount of references that people started making with the name "Charlie"... they teased me about Charlie Brown, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie the Tuna (sometimes I seriously think people's favorite passtime is saying "Sorry, Charlie,") Choo-Choo Charlie from the old Good 'N Plenty commercial, I got TORTURED by Youtube's "Charlie the Unicorn" video ("Chaaaaarlie.... come to candy mountain, Chaaaaaarlie!" URGH... >.<), not to mention another Youtube video "Charlie Bit My Finger," and Charlie's Angels to go along with it. Pop culture just was not kind to my name. I pity anyone with that freaking name...

And I wasn't willing to start going by "Charles," because, I don't know, that name felt too "masculine" and "grown-up" somehow. I didn't want to be powerful or official or kingly or grown-up, I wanted a name that still ended in the feminine dimunuitive "ie." So independent of gender dysphoria, I really started hating my name.

By the time I legally changed my name, I was really glad to be rid of it. Now the only references that people make in regards to me are "Sweet Caroline" by Neil Diamond, another obscure 50s song called "Carrie," and the 1976 horror movie "Carrie." I can handle all of those references. They're all good references to things that I actually like, rather than just constant, constant, constant annoyances. And I'll admit, I still smile like crazy every time I see my new first and middle name, "Caroline Elizabeth." I LOVE LOVE LOVE that combination. It's so pretty! :)

I am a Charlie, and as tired as I got of that stupid "Charlie bit me" thing, I never grew to hate my name. I actually like it so much that I may just change my first name from Charles to Charlie since it's not necessarily a masculine name. My middle name would have to go and I would consider changing my last name to something that people wouldn't ask me how to spell.
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BlaineGame

Quote from: Eevee on November 12, 2014, 12:50:25 PM
Oh, I said in my earlier post that my birth name doesn't really bother me. That's really only true for the first name. My middle name (especially) and my last name really bug me. My middle name (I'll just say it) is Ross... blah! It just leaves a bad taste in my mouth after saying it because I know it's attached to me still. I think it's just ugly and doesn't fit me at all, even if I wasn't trans. I really only hate my last name because it's my dad's last name. He has decided to cut me out of his life, so I'll do the same to him by ditching his name. I'm going to take an older last name from my mom's side of the family instead that my cousin has also adopted. I feel more connected to that side of the family anyway.

Be thankful your middle name isn't Holt...I mean, I don't like the sound of it but I tolerate it cuz it's my grandpa's last name and I was close to him before he died...His middle name was Lee which I like more because it's kinda unisex
Lyrics for a song I wrote

This ain't a scam
It's who I am
I am a man inside
This ain't a dream
Stop being mean
And just accept it.
I am ready to shine!
Ready to fight for that dream of mine
I am a man inside
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Eevee

Quote from: BlaineGame on November 13, 2014, 07:22:52 AM
Be thankful your middle name isn't Holt...
I dunno... I like Holt a lot more than Ross. That's just me though.

Ross...  :icon_blah:

Eevee
#133

Because its genetic makeup is irregular, it quickly changes its form due to a variety of causes.



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pianoforte

I hated it! Always hated the full version of the name when I was a kid because it meant I was in trouble, and I couldn't stand the nickname everyone called me by. I still have to write it under former names used whenever I do paperwork because it was even on my official school records. Plus, there were other, even more disgusting, versions of that nickname that people would sometimes use (And someone's still do, ugh).

I tried another available nickname for a while bit didn't really like it either. Too feminine.

Eventually I embraced the full version of my name because at work it meant I was being respected.

Then I shortened it to one unisex letter.

Then I decided on a male name, and I'm slowly integrating it into my life.

I like my new name a LOT better.
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Nicole

Mine was Nick, I picked out 3 names, gave them to mum, she said, no I like nicole, it wasn't on the list but liked it
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lindagrl

i intensely disliked it.  It´s a very uncommon name and i was teased quite a bit for it.
Also i am named after my uncle, a man i never liked.
i have never been comfortable with it and now that i am linda, i really don´t like being called my birth name.
i think i can, i think i can said the little engine
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Gothic Dandy

My birth name is somewhat uncommon and I sort of like it. But when I was a kid, I was TERRIFIED of saying my own name. One summer I met a girl who had the same name as me and I couldn't bring myself to call her by name. I was also TERRIFIED of seeing my own reflection as a kid, even just a glimpse in a reflective surface.

Come to think of it, I still feel weird hearing my name (the full version--my family calls me by the diminuitives and I HATE those), and I'd have trouble saying it for any reason other than to introduce myself.

Obviously this is an identity thing, but I wonder if it's a transgender identity thing. I hate not knowing for certain.
Just a little faerie punk floating through this strange world of humans.
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