design_mom
probably more like my dad than I care to admit
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2007
- Messages
- 6,220
.I totally agree with you here, Mrsklamc. Any CIVIL human being would respect her wishes. Unfortunately, she does not seem to be dealing with civil people. It's a respect issue, not really about the name. The question is -- how do you deal with that when you really *cannot* control the words that come out of someone else's mouth.
It seems like the options/suggestions are:
-- Ignore it and hope the bullies get bored.
-- Make a big issue about it.
-- Call the offenders nasty names
-- Cut the offenders out of your life until they stop 'disrespecting you.'
IMHO this is a "pick your battles" thing. If you put your foot down, this one is going to be a really hard one to win *especially* if they're doing it to annoy you on purpose. (If they are nice people and simply don't realize how strongly you feel about the issue, that's another story...but it doesn't sound like it's the case.)
I think your best bet would be to ignore it and/or laugh it off. Likely, they'll get bored with it. And at the very least, if they don't think it's getting to you, it'll probably die out on it's own. The rest of the civilized world will call her what you want her to be called, so it'll just be a few "losers" that don't.
They're acting like bullies -- maybe they'll go away when they stop getting a response. Especially since your daughter is an infant and hasn't expressed her own wishes about her name yet, I think you've got time before you have to worry about her thinking it's okay to disrespect you.
If you make a big deal about it and they don't back down, you're going to box yourself in to where you *have* to issue an ultimatim... and then you will have to go through with it or you really will be in a "disrespecting me" situation.
If you start calling them names, you crawl right down into the gutter with them.
If it really is a big deal, the only way you can solve it with certainty is to cut them out of your life. But IMHO that's a big step over a nickname, and aside from teaching your kids "not to let someone disrespect you", you might end up teaching them that it's okay to 'cut someone off" whenever they make you mad. I don't know the full extent of your situation -- and I definitely think there are some situations when cutting-off is warranted -- but that's not a step *I* would be willing to go to over this. It's something only you can decide.
This is not a battle I'd be willing to fight because it's one that's so tough to win.
It seems like the options/suggestions are:
-- Ignore it and hope the bullies get bored.
-- Make a big issue about it.
-- Call the offenders nasty names
-- Cut the offenders out of your life until they stop 'disrespecting you.'
IMHO this is a "pick your battles" thing. If you put your foot down, this one is going to be a really hard one to win *especially* if they're doing it to annoy you on purpose. (If they are nice people and simply don't realize how strongly you feel about the issue, that's another story...but it doesn't sound like it's the case.)
I think your best bet would be to ignore it and/or laugh it off. Likely, they'll get bored with it. And at the very least, if they don't think it's getting to you, it'll probably die out on it's own. The rest of the civilized world will call her what you want her to be called, so it'll just be a few "losers" that don't.
They're acting like bullies -- maybe they'll go away when they stop getting a response. Especially since your daughter is an infant and hasn't expressed her own wishes about her name yet, I think you've got time before you have to worry about her thinking it's okay to disrespect you.
If you make a big deal about it and they don't back down, you're going to box yourself in to where you *have* to issue an ultimatim... and then you will have to go through with it or you really will be in a "disrespecting me" situation.
If you start calling them names, you crawl right down into the gutter with them.
If it really is a big deal, the only way you can solve it with certainty is to cut them out of your life. But IMHO that's a big step over a nickname, and aside from teaching your kids "not to let someone disrespect you", you might end up teaching them that it's okay to 'cut someone off" whenever they make you mad. I don't know the full extent of your situation -- and I definitely think there are some situations when cutting-off is warranted -- but that's not a step *I* would be willing to go to over this. It's something only you can decide.
This is not a battle I'd be willing to fight because it's one that's so tough to win.

. Now you know someone who goes by their full birth name.
Obviously, even though hubby forced me to leave an N off (grr), I like the Irish names.... (sorry, forgot my son's name isn't in my sig...he's Eamon)
