Santa Fe New Mexican

Is it too late to change daughter’s name?

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Question: I want to legally change our daughter’s name. No one pronounces it correctly, and I think it’s going to cause her more problems as she gets older. My husband doesn’t want to, however. He says changing it will confuse her. She’s 19 months old, for crying out loud. If she’s confused for a week or two, so what? She’ll get over it. What do you think?

Answer: I think she’s 19 months old, for crying out loud. I think if she’s confused for a week or two, so what? She’ll get over it. That’s what I think, and I am an expert concerning this topic.

Before I was born, my parents called me “the Bobo.” Talk about a trauma. When I was born, and they saw that I was male, they began calling me Mister Bobo. I was Mister Bobo or just Bobo until I went to school. I will forever remember Day One. My mother and I were sitting in the principal’s office.

The principal asked, “What shall we call him?”

My mother looked at me. She was sad, I could tell. She looked back at the principal, put her hand on my arm, and said, “I’d like you to call him John.”

John? Adding to my trauma, my mother referred to the toilet as the “Johnny.” I don’t need to explain why I went into psychology, now do I? Isn’t it enough that I didn’t know my name was John until the first day of first grade? Oh, no! Now, after five halcyon years being Bobo, my mother renamed me after something virtually unmentiona­ble. Oh, the ignominy!

If I can survive that with my sanity intact, your daughter will do just fine with her new name. Just remember, however, Bobo’s already taken.

Question: My first marriage dissolved when our son — who’s very sweet and happy — was just shy of 3. He hasn’t seen his father since and never asks about him. The child support checks abruptly stopped a couple of months ago, and I subsequent­ly learned he committed suicide. I suppose I should tell my son, who is now 7, that his father is dead, but should I tell him he took his own life?

Answer: No.

When it comes to giving a child informatio­n of a “sensitive” nature, the operative rule is to tell a child only what they need to know and only when they need to know it.

Applying that rule to the situation at hand, an argument can be made that your son doesn’t even need to know his father is dead. Given the fact that he never asks about him, I think you could wait until he’s older, even a teenager. Even then, there is no point in telling your son the specifics of his father’s demise. You risk nothing by leaving that out. You risk something by adding it in.

Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at www.johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

 ??  ?? John Rosemond Living With Children
John Rosemond Living With Children

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