Quote from: learningtolive on August 11, 2013, 03:28:16 PM
It seems a lot of people like Madison for me. I don't know though. I feel like it isn't common enough. I don't want people to think "oh your name is Madison..... YOUR TRANS".
I'm not sure why you would think that because Madison is a very common name for girls! It's FAR more common than Molly in fact.
Madison is more common nowadays than virtually all other names that have been suggested so far in this thread (except for maybe Samantha and Isabelle). Over the last two decades, I've seen and heard Madison used many times in movies and TV, and I'm sure that there were a few Madisons at my middle school and high school. I can't say the same about Molly. Molly is a very classical name; it has a timeless quality. That's why you can find middle-aged women with that name as well as (occasionally) little girls. But Madison is modern, trendy, hip, and even preppy. All of the Madisons that I've encountered in fiction and real life have been attractive girls from upper-middle-class households.
The Social Security Administration maintains a database of popular baby names, which you can search by year:
http://www.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/popularnames.cgiI've done the research for you. Madison first appeared in the top 25 in 1996, at #15. It has grown increasingly popular since then. Here its rankings up to last year:
1996: #15
1997: #10
1998: #9
1999: #7
2000: #3
2001: #2
2002: #22003: #3
2004: #3
2005: #3
2006: #3
2007: #5
2008: #6
2009: #7
2010: #8
2011: #8
2012: #9
Ever since 1996, Madison has been more popular than Jennifer, which was the most popular female name from 1970 to 1985 but dropped out of the top 25 in 2000. Jessica dominated the mid-1980s to mid-1990s but fell below Madison in 1999. (Interesting fact: In 2010, the 25th most popular name for baby girls was Nevaeh. It was actually more popular than former champs Jennifer and Jessica.)
So how has Molly ranked?
I don't know because Molly has not been in the top 25 since at least as far back as 1960. It's not really that common at all, though perhaps it just sounds "ordinary" rather than fancy or exotic. I'm very surprised that you consider Molly as common enough to be unsuspicious but not Madison, when the statistics suggest that the opposite should be true. So trust me, NOBODY will assume that you're trans if you call yourself Madison. The name has positive and attractive connotations (more so than Molly, IMO), and if anything, strangers might think that your parents were somewhat forward-thinking by giving you that name.
I couldn't care less if you choose Madison or Molly or Jennifer or whatever. But if you don't choose Madison, then I just hope that your reason isn't that "it isn't common enough."