Logo

Log In Sign Up |  An official publication of: American College of Emergency Physicians
Navigation
  • Home
  • Multimedia
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
  • Clinical
    • Airway Managment
    • Case Reports
    • Critical Care
    • Guidelines
    • Imaging & Ultrasound
    • Pain & Palliative Care
    • Pediatrics
    • Resuscitation
    • Trauma & Injury
  • Resource Centers
    • mTBI Resource Center
  • Career
    • Practice Management
      • Benchmarking
      • Reimbursement & Coding
      • Care Team
      • Legal
      • Operations
      • Quality & Safety
    • Awards
    • Certification
    • Compensation
    • Early Career
    • Education
    • Leadership
    • Profiles
    • Retirement
    • Work-Life Balance
  • Columns
    • ACEP4U
    • Airway
    • Benchmarking
    • Brief19
    • By the Numbers
    • Coding Wizard
    • EM Cases
    • End of the Rainbow
    • Equity Equation
    • FACEPs in the Crowd
    • Forensic Facts
    • From the College
    • Images in EM
    • Kids Korner
    • Medicolegal Mind
    • Opinion
      • Break Room
      • New Spin
      • Pro-Con
    • Pearls From EM Literature
    • Policy Rx
    • Practice Changers
    • Problem Solvers
    • Residency Spotlight
    • Resident Voice
    • Skeptics’ Guide to Emergency Medicine
    • Sound Advice
    • Special OPs
    • Toxicology Q&A
    • WorldTravelERs
  • Resources
    • ACEP.org
    • ACEP Knowledge Quiz
    • Issue Archives
    • CME Now
    • Annual Scientific Assembly
      • ACEP14
      • ACEP15
      • ACEP16
      • ACEP17
      • ACEP18
      • ACEP19
    • Annals of Emergency Medicine
    • JACEP Open
    • Emergency Medicine Foundation
  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Medical Editor in Chief
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Awards
    • Authors
    • Article Submission
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright Information

Taking Aim at the Baby Name

By Lisa M. Bundy | on May 1, 2012 | 0 Comment
Opinion
  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Print-Friendly Version

Come on, I know you have them. The lists! You know, the lists of goofy baby names that you can’t believe that supposedly coherent people would give their little bundles of joy. Pretty much every hospital I’ve worked at has had one of these lists. The ED can be extremely stressful at times, and we all need a little comedy to realize that we can’t sweat the small stuff. These poor kids have to live with these horrendous names for the rest of their lives.

You Might Also Like
  • Taking Care of Little Brothers
  • Is a Crying Baby an Emergency or Just Normal Infant Behavior?
  • Tips for Taking Forensic Photographic Evidence in the Emergency Department
Explore This Issue
ACEP News: Vol 31 – No 05 – May 2012

First, there are the “really?” names. The ones that make you say, “Really?! They named you that? Poor kid…”

Some of the ones I know of include Shi-thead (yes, really), Yersinia (her nickname can be Black Death), Abcde (pronounced ab-sa-dee), Female (pronounced like tamale, except with an F). I’m sure you’ve all seen more and probably worse.

The coup de grâce is La-a. “The dash is pronounced,” the indignant mother told the nurse. “La-dash-a.” Seriously? Would you pick a lawyer, doctor, or accountant named La-a?

I suppose my aggravation with goofy names comes from my own experience. Yes, Lisa is a pretty common name for someone born before 1975. In fact, Lisa was the most popular girl’s name for the entire decade of the 1960s.

But grow up with a last name like Munsch, and you realize how much you want to minimize your child’s aggravation. I mean, not only was my last name Munsch, but I was at least a head shorter than anyone in my class. Yep. Munchkin.

Also, no one could ever spell or pronounce Munsch. I realize it’s weird and German. But it was really frustrating to have to correct EVERYONE. Now I’ve married into Bundy. My husband always says, “There was nothing wrong with my name until that stupid TV show. Oh, and the serial killer.”

This brings me back to my frustration with people who purposefully GIVE their children weird names. There are the NICU names: Destiny, LaMiracle, Amiracle, and Nevaeh (heaven spelled backward). And there are the preppy “Muffy and Buffy” names. These would have been good names for the rich villains of John Hughes’ 1980s movies, such as Blair, Blaine, Madison, Braylen, Braxton, MacKenzie (for girls – “Mac” means “son of”), and Kathie Lee Gifford’s choice: Cody. I can’t picture a 50-year-old ex-Marine named Cody, or Kodee.

There are also names that normal people would spell one way, but to be “unique,” parents spell it in a way that makes no sense. For example: Jackson is a pretty common name for a boy. When it’s spelled Jaxon, Jakson, or Jaxson, that child will have to spell his name for EVERY person for the rest of his life. Life is complicated enough!

Other examples of this trend include putting in Ys and AEs and other letter combinations that make little phonetic sense: Londynn instead of London, or Aevrie instead of Avery, like my cousin’s daughter. I also have a cousin named Bretagne (yes, it’s French); her parents call her Brita-NAY. The rest of us just say Brittany (as in Spears). We aren’t that pretentious.

I have a litmus test for naming my future child. If it’s a dumb name, my brother said he’d just call it “Bob,” boy or girl. So I just ask him if he would “Bob” a name, and if the answer is yes, I steer clear. If any of you would like to try names out on my brother, let me know.

Shakespeare once wrote, “What’s in a name?” A person’s name evokes all types of notions and emotions, good and bad. Maybe I have offended some of you, as maybe you’ve named your children some versions of the above. I would like to say that it’s nothing personal. But when you’re talking about a person’s name, it truly is.


Dr. Bundy is an attending physician at ERMed, LLC, in Montgomery, Ala., and a former photojournalist, who not only sings in the car, but talks to herself, is addicted to diet drinks and shoes, and thinks emergency medicine is the greatest specialty.

Pages: 1 2 | Multi-Page

Topics: Adventures of a Rookie DocCommentaryEmergency MedicineEmergency PhysicianPregnancy

Related

  • November 2025 News from the College

    November 4, 2025 - 0 Comment
  • Code Eclampsia: Navigating the Storm in ED Management

    August 25, 2025 - 2 Comments
  • August 2025 News from the College

    August 4, 2025 - 1 Comment

Current Issue

ACEP Now: November 2025

Download PDF

Read More

No Responses to “Taking Aim at the Baby Name”

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


*
*


Wiley
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertise
  • Cookie Preferences
Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 2333-2603