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Changing a child's name

Invisible Woman's picture

DH absolutely hates SS11’s name and would change it in a heartbeat if he could. SS’s first name is practically a girl’s name and his last name is unpronounceable (it’s BM’s name) and DH had no say whatsoever when he was born. Unfortunately, BM has to sign off on on a name change, so here’s no chance that that would happen. His hope is that eventually his son realizes how problematic his name is and asks to have it changed himself. DH keeps hinting at him that it would be so much easier if he had a normal first and last name rather than something so crazy but SS hasn’t gotten the message yet.

DH said he and BM had discussed before the baby was born giving him a name that would work in both languages/countries and they had a list including normal names like Alexander, Jacob, Michael (my DH’s middle name) and were going to use DH’s last name. But they broke up by the time the baby was born and BM went and gave the baby a bizarre first and middle name and her last name.

SS’s first name is common in BM’s native country, but is very similar to one of the most common girl’s names in the US that is never used for boys. You’d think his middle name was a bad joke.

People are always getting SS’s name wrong and assuming he’s a girl. A few weeks ago I took SS and my DD3 to the dentist (big mistake to have to deal with both of them). When the dental hygienist tried to call his name off the sign-in sheet, she said the common girl’s name and then stumbled over his crazy last name. She looked around the waiting room and assumed it was my daughter. Awkwardly I had to tell her that she meant my SS. She stared at me and I think she assumed he was some sort of transgendered kid. It took me saying and spelling his name three times before she realized the mistake.

It makes him so separate from our family - he’s this kid with a very ethnic sounding name and we all have very normal average American names. People assume he must be adopted from overseas.

Should DH approach him about changing it and tell him how much better off he would be to not have a girly, crazy name? It would save so much of a hassle and he hopes that if his son wants to change his name, BM won’t object. But I wish you could simply just fill out a form and say “this nutjob named her kid something ridiculous and the dad wants to change it” and the court would let him do it. After all, he is the dad. Why should the mom have the only say?

Anyone have experience with going to court to change a name?

Comments

Invisible Woman's picture

SS uses a nickname from his mom's country that sounds like a girls' name and he has two girls in his class that have a very similar name. But we never call him that. His BM does. He will be teased to death if he ever asked his classmates to call him that.

I'm not sure it really shortens to anything that would sound like a boys' name. His first and middle initials are both vowels.

Invisible Woman's picture

SS is completely anti-social at school and has no friends. He's likely being teased. His teacher has remarked about how completely isolated and separate he is. He doesn't interact at all with the other kids. His name can't be helping him and he's likely getting bullied over it.

knucklehead's picture

DH should absolutely NOT say anything to SS about his name. That is SS's identity. It's isn't "weird" in his native country.
He has his mother's last name.
Personally, I think it's horrible that your DH is trying to make SS self conscious about something that identifies him and he had no control over getting it.
Your DH needs to focus on being a good, active parent and leave the poor kid alone.

FeuilleMorte's picture

I gotta agree with Knuck here. It's not only his name, it represents half of his culture. If he doesn't complain about it, then DH needs to shut up.

Invisible Woman's picture

SS only identifies with BM's culture and his BM's boyfriends' culture and languages. He doesn't want anything to do with his dad. That's a huge insult to DH.

Most people are shocked when they learn that SS was born in the US and his father is not foreign. SS is classified as an ESL student at his school. Teachers can't understand when they meet with me and DH and I and we don't speak SS's native language. They blame DH for him being so behind in English when it was BM's fault.

knucklehead's picture

It's ok if that's who and what he identifies with. He is, in fact, half that culture. Does SS primarily live with BM?

And, honestly, who cares if DH's feelings are hurt. It doesn't give him a pass to make his kid feel badly.

RainbowsAndDaisies's picture

I agree completely with knucklehead. If you suspect he is being teased about his language, culture, and name then you should both be his strongest supporters, not voice the same criticisms as his bullies.

Invisible Woman's picture

SS identifies only with his BM's native country and not his dad's (where he was born and is a citizen of). BM only spoke her native language in her home (claiming she was protecting her cultural identity) so now SS is behind in English at school and alienated him from his dad when he was little since they were unable to communicate. DH hates BM's native country with a passion because of that.

SS does have control over it now. If he wanted to change his name, he could, but he's still choosing BM over his father when he has to understand how many problems he has due to his name.

At the dentist, he sat there completely oblivious when the woman called him the girl's name.

knucklehead's picture

Um, no, I don't believe an 11 year old can just change his name. BTW, I have done name changes with my kids. Not all of the kids, only the ones that WANTED it. I didn't drive that bus.
The judge questioned each child to see if THEY wanted it.
Oh, yeah, I had to have a notarized affidavit from their biodad, too. See, the courts require the adults to make that decision so one parent couldn't influence the child into doing what the parent wanted. Your SS is fine with his name. Leave it the hell alone.

Y'all need to back off and leave SS alone on this. Who cares what Dh hates? This is SS's name and identity, NOT HIS. By keeping his own name, he is NOT "choosing BM over his father." That has got to be about the most ridiculous thing I've heard in quite awhile.

RainbowsAndDaisies's picture

You keep saying that he is choosing bm over his father. The kid isnt choosing sides by not finding anything wrong with his name or identifying more with one culture over the other. These things make him who he is and from what I can tell you and his father are systematically rejecting his identity. Poor kid. Bullied at school, not accepted at home where it is made clear that his father wishes he were something he's not. No wonder he identifies with his mother. Being trilingual is an amazing gift. In my opinion, you and his father are the ones who need an attitude adjustment, not the kid.

Disneyfan's picture

Has his dad been in his life all this time? If so, how could he have not learned english? If both parents and their families were speaking to him in their native languages since birth, he should have been able to speak both languages by the time he started school.

When I taught K and 1st grades, I had students enter my class speaking 3 languages. They spoke French at home with mom(from Haiti) and her family. They spoke Spanish(from PR or DR) when they visited dad and his family. They learned English in day care. 9 times out of 10,they could only read and write English, but they spoke all 3 languages.

Invisible Woman's picture

Yes, DH has been in his life since birth but he and BM never lived together after the baby was born. DH only had him for only a few hours a week when he was a baby and a weekend a month when he was a toddler. That was the only time he was exposed to English. It was one of the ways BM alienated SS from his dad.

BM's boyfriend speaks French. That's SS's second language and he's very fluent in it. English is his third and the weekest of the three. He only started picking up English in preschool. His BM enrolled him in a French/English bilingual school. She's been wanting to take SS back over to Europe since her boyfriend doesn't want to stay in the US so she was more concerned with SS learning French than English.

SS speaks English okay for someone who is not a native speaker. But he is behind for English-only speaking kids his age. He inverts words and sounds awkward.

Invisible Woman's picture

DH was able to get custody until BM gets her visa and job situation worked out. BM doesn't have a job in the US and can't legally stay here. She doesn't have a job in her native country and is staying with her parents. DH was able to successfuly argue that it was in SS's best interest to stay with him considering the circumstances. BM could be back as soon as this summer or she might not be able to get another visa since she has a DUI.

Invisible Woman's picture

To be clear, SS has been in the US his whole life. But he had been going to a school that catered to a lot of expats that was billingual.

If his BM had her way, she would have moved back to Europe when he was a toddler.