All Content from Business Insider 20小时前
Our daughters are named Kyle and Cameran. People are often confused, but we don't care.
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

本文讲述了一位母亲为孩子选择非传统名字的经历,分享了在社会对名字性别刻板印象下的困惑与坚持。作者为女儿选择了中性名字Kyle和Cameran,为儿子选择了Brooks,这引发了许多误解和纠正。尽管如此,作者并未因此改变,她认为重要的是名字能代表孩子本身,而非遵循传统。文章探讨了名字选择对个人身份认同的影响,以及打破传统观念的勇气。

👧作者为女儿选择了中性名字Kyle和Cameran,打破了传统的命名规范,这在日常生活中引发了名字被误读和性别混淆的困扰。

👦作者的儿子Brooks的名字也因其独特性而经常被误解,人们常常试图纠正或质疑这个名字,反映了社会对名字性别刻板印象的普遍存在。

🤔作者分享了她对这些误解的回应,包括耐心纠正,以及最终不再为自己的选择辩解,强调了名字代表孩子个性的重要性,而非遵循传统。

💖作者通过这段经历,表达了对孩子名字的坚定,以及对社会固有观念的挑战,也反映了父母在为孩子选择名字时的思考和情感。

Nicole Johnson's four kids from left to right: Cameran, Zachary, Brooks, and Kyle.

"We aren't even Irish," my Sicilian grandmother said as we perused baby names for our third child.

Naming a tiny human is difficult because it's a name they'll wear for their entire lives, and everyone has an opinion.

In truth, I was just humoring her. Looking through names wasn't necessary because my husband and I had already picked one for our daughter: Kyle—a traditionally Irish name that we'd chosen for my husband and my grandmother's husband, both partly Irish.

"Kyle," she said, and threw her hands in the air. "It means handsome."

I understood what really bothered her was not the origin of the name we'd chosen, but the traditional gender associated with it.

I countered, saying, "It means 'narrow' or 'straight' and it's a unisex name. Her full name will be Kyle Marie."

"Why can't it just be something simple?" my grandmother asked in a final plea. "People will get confused and think she's a boy. You already have a Cameran for a girl. Isn't that enough?"

I named my daughters Cameran and Kyle—it's had its challenges

Several months later, despite my grandmother's protests and warnings, we sat in the hospital room and informed the woman who came to fill out the birth certificate of our child's name.

I suppose I should have known when she said, "Kyle or Kylie," that confusion would color my little girl's name for years to come.

While I adore my daughters' names, Cameran and Kyle, they have not come without consequence.

"Hi, I'm calling with Kyle's test results," the pediatrician's office would say. "He does not have the flu." They hadn't looked at her chart.

"She," I said more often than I care to count.

"I thought you had two boys," another mother said when my girls' names were announced at a school event, and they stood up.

The most frustrating part was not the mistakes. I understood those because I knew I had gone against the norm and broken tradition. It was people's constant need to fix what was not broken.

"Kyle" became "Kylie," as in, "You are Kylie's mother." People often attempted to correct what I'm sure they thought must have been a typo.

I named my son Brooks — yes, with an "s" at the end

Johnson's kids from left to right: Brooks, Cameran, Kyle, Zachary.

When I gave birth to my son, the confusion continued. "Brooks," my grandmother said, "sounds like a girl's name." Here we go again, I remember thinking.

My husband, who was deeply involved with helping choose all of our kids' names, liked Brooks because it belonged to the NHL player, Brooks Laich. He was not only a famous hockey player but also good citizen.

In 2010, Laich pulled over to help a woman change her flat tire after coming off a playoff series loss. To my husband, a college hockey player, this act of kindness meant more than Laich's NHL status, which was a big part of why we chose the name for our son.

As Brooks got older, the confusion continued. Brook, people would say, sure, they'd heard the name wrong.

Even the act of dropping the "s" from his name did not help quell their need to make sense of a "girl" name for a boy. We were back to where we had been with his sisters.

I suppose we understood the confusion. We had created it. I guess we could have gone the traditional route we had with our oldest, Zachary. No one ever confused him for a girl and attempted to correct his name.

I wonder how life would have been different

In truth, I have wondered what doctor's appointments and school events would have looked like if we'd gone with more traditionally feminine names like Taylor and Olivia instead of Cameran and Kyle. If Brooks had been Steven or Matthew, would things have gone differently?

I will never know. I also realize that I simply don't care—I never did. I continue to correct people, in the kindest way possible, though I have stopped justifying my choice with, "Yes, we like boy names for girls and girl names for boys," or "I understand, Kyle is a traditionally male name."

After all, while Kyle is predominantly used for boys, it is unisex, as is Brooks. Now that our kids are older, ranging from 12 to 20, I know we picked the names that best represent them, whether it's traditional or not, and I'm more than OK with that.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

名字 性别 传统 身份认同
相关文章