I have been telling myself not to look at the top 100 because I just knew it would steer me away from the 6 names (3 boy, 3 girl) we have picked out.
The only two not on it is Calvin our #1 boy pick, and Ava our #3 pick.
Our #1 girl is Evelyn, so now I'm stuck. I really love the name...I just don't want LO to have a ridiculously popular name. How do you not let that bother you? I plan on calling her Evie, but still.
Re: For those of you who picked names in the top 100...
I think they are the top 100 for a reason, they are (mostly) beautiful names. If you love a name, does it really matter if others use it too? Also, it shouldn't surprise you that others love it too.
For boy names, they tend to have about 10-15 "trendy" names but the rest are the usual suspects. Classics.
Girls have more variety IMHO. Evelyn is very popular right now (with the nn Evie) but if you really love it go for it. If you like it because it sounds good then maybe rethink it?
DH and I didn't look at the top names when we picked Allison (generally top 50 for the last few decades). We picked it because we both knew that was our daughter's name as soon as we said her whole name together.
So, long story short, go with what you love. No baby will be the ONLY one with a name, it isn't likely anyway. But make sure you don't give them a name that will make them blush later in life!
Is the name popular where you live?
I picked a name in the top 100. It isn't popular where we live but even if it was I wouldn't worry to much about it. When I was in school we had a very small class and every once in a while a new student would move to our area and have the same name as someone else in class. We didn't think much of it. Usually the student who had been there longer took on a NN.
DS will also attend a smaller school so I just don't worry.
My DD's name is #3 the last time I checked.
It just doesn't matter to us. A common name doesn't mean the kid isn't special or unique, just like an unusual name doesn't guarantee specialness or uniqueness.
I have an unusual name and growing up, no one could ever pronounce it, or spell it and I could never find it on anything the way my friends could find there names on pencils and school supplies like that. I hated substitute teachers and the inevitable pregnant pause when they came to my name on the class attendance sheet.
We didn't go out of our way to choose a "normal" name for DD but we weren't trying to avoid popular names, either. It's just one we loved. The rest of our top 5 list were all pretty common names, they're just our style.
I'll be honest- one of our name is in the top 300 and I'm bummed about it. It didn't scar me for life, but growing up I was one of many with the same name, and not only same first name, but same last initial, so I had to go by my first and last name throughout high school. It was annoying. Now, we will probably still go with a name that's more popular than we'd like because we love it. It just happens that usually when a name is super popular I don't love it, not because it's ranking is high, but because it's lost it's sparkle for me, I hear it all the time, or I know too many people with that name so it's hard to break associations, kwim?
If you still love it, and can't talk yourself out of it, then it's meant to be. If you keep wavering because of popularity (or any other reason) maybe it just doesn't feel right and you should keep looking.
Loss #6 2014 Loss #7 (chemical) 2014
~DS Born! 2009~
~DD Born! 2013~
I agree with all of this. And I think popularity largely depends on where you live. I LOVE the name Evelyn, but I only know one person IRL with this name and she is around 70 years old. There was one baby named Evelyn on my BNB. I say go with what you love instead of settling on a "less popular" name and regretting it.
First off...let me just say that I LOVE the name Evelyn. It was in our top 3 for our DD.
Just because a name is in the top 100 doesn't necessarily mean it's popular for your area. DD is named Natalie, which is a top 20 name. I work in an elementary school and in the past 5 years, I've only had 2 Natalie's in the whole school of 500 kids. I would second guess it if I knew a ton of Natalie's....only because I don't want her to be one of 5 in her class growing up.
I also agree with people that names are in the top 100 for a reason.....because they are beautiful names!
This really does not bother me.
While I know "nick" is a popular name I have yet to meet another little Nicholas. And even if we do, who cares?
I have a name in mind that is top 100 where I live. I try to stay away from names that are 'newcomers' in the top 100. I think they might sound very dated in 10 years from now.
Names like Madison and Mason are highly popular and fairly new, so I think those are names that may sound dated pretty soon. A previous poster named Allison, a name that has been in the top 100 for decades. IMO, that makes it a classic, it won't disappear overnight.
The name I picked is a "classic" in the same way. Throughout the past centuries, girls have been given that name, so I think it won't sound "2013" twenty years from now.
Obviously, Evelyn is such a classic name that won't sound dated later on, as far as I can tell.
My DH was one of three with his name in his class and he never cared. So that's possible too. And I had a non top 100 name and ended up with a same name classmate. Hated it.
Ava's not in the top 100? There's no way.
We didn't look at it at all. I certainly didn't want DD to have an extremely popular name but our love for her name was most important. The other thing to remember is just because it's high on the SSA list doesn't mean it's popular where you live. I know only one child named Evelyn even though it's very high on the list.
We've met a few other Eli's but I've found it doesn't really bother me. If I really loved a top ten name like Ava or Emma I don't think that would stop me from using it.
Regardless of how popular a name is, if it's a good name, I don't get tired of hearing it.
My son is named Aaron Jacob but we call him Jacob because his grandfather goes by Aaron. To me, the tradition of the name (he is the fourth) and the fact that his dad and I both like it mean more than the numbers on the chart.
As far as Evie, what about Evangeline? That is my number one name for a girl and I would call her Evie prn EV-ee