Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

It's All in the Name


Heather Shay

Recommended Posts

  • Forum Moderator
1 hour ago, ElizabethStar said:

Y’all made me go look it up. 
My (dead-name) is 400+ down the list.  Less than 350 other people were given my name in 1974. 
 

Elizabeth is 12th with over 12k girls given the name in ‘74. 
 

 

 

Elizabeth. You are legion.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
  • Replies 61
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Heather Shay

    16

  • Ivy

    7

  • Jackie C.

    4

  • Elizabeth Star

    4

2 hours ago, Shay said:

I think I'll use the most common spelling - Michelle - it will be fun to do 4 loopy loo's).

I love that- :)) 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Ok - so I had to look mine up as well.

My male name was 4th in my birth year.

Michele with 1 L was 100 and Michelle with 2 LL's was 124. 

Heather was 440

Shay didn't make the top 1000

 

Elizabeth was 626

Unknown placed 329 (never knew anyone named Unknown)

 

Link to comment

So I had to look it up...

Audrey is 221st for baby names in my birth year. Pretty rare. Another reason to love it!

My soon-to-be-dead name is 53rd in my birth year. And I won't miss it!

 

Love,

~Audrey.

Link to comment

I don't have a female name. For one thing I'm not transitioning in any way. (And for another, given the life I've led, I feel I'm not deserving of one.) I think I mentioned once before, here on Trans Pulse, I'm partial to the name "Felina". I recall the gender therapist I saw briefly several years back saying it's important to choose a name that was popular around the time you were born. I don't know if the name Felina was ever particularly popular although I recently learned it is now the name of a women's clothing line. I do know it was a name in the old Marty Robbins' song: "El Paso" which was originally released in 1959. (By then I was 11.)

 

I recall, many years ago when I was growing up my mother told me, while she was expecting, she'd hoped she'd have a girl. (She followed that up with: "But now I'm glad I had a boy." (I suppose she felt she had to say that.) Anyway... I recall her saying that, had I been a girl, she'd wanted to name me... either Susan or Suzanne I can't recall which one.

 

Interestingly... my real-life first name is now beginning to be used as a name for girls. A few years ago I was watching one of our local news programs. They had a piece that had something to do with a young couple's housing situation as I recall. And the wife's first name was the same as mine (in it's full form, not it's abbreviated form, if that makes sense.) And I remember thinking, at the time, if it was good enough for her it would be good enough for me...Yea! ?

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@Overalls Bear that is good sound reasoning for you and glad it works for you. That is all that matters really.

Link to comment

To take a new name is a break from the past. I wonder - particularly for us older girls - how important is that?  Is it a real break to just feminize our former "dead" name?  Do we need a clear break?

I don't think we become a different person.  Really, we are who we were all the time, but just didn't realize it - or didn't feel free to act on it.

I don't know…

I think it was Dr. Seuss that said, "Oh the thinks you can think…"   

Sometimes I just go in circles.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@Jandi and that is perfectly fine. I'm 68 and finally accepting myself and although I've gone in circles all my life I got off the merry go round and and told my wife I have to try HRT as nothing speech as worked for me and started HRT going on 6 months now and it feels good and right and a name change feels right for me. I like the Native American practice of changing your name anytime in your life.  . young or old.... When some life changing event happens to you and this has been life changing for me at the tender age of 68.

Link to comment

I picked this name mostly to have one to use on internet forums. Looked at a list of birth names from my birth year and picked one that was in a similar position in the other column. And all the Rhondas I'd known in the past weren't in my world any more. Then at some point I started getting that feeling you get when you hear or see your name when Rhondas pop up. Not convinced I'll ever use it for real, still workshopping names in case I do decide to switch in the future. 

Link to comment
11 hours ago, Jandi said:

To take a new name is a break from the past. I wonder - particularly for us older girls - how important is that?  Is it a real break to just feminize our former "dead" name?  Do we need a clear break?

This is something I've wondered about too. I agree that while transition is a rebirth in many ways, we are still the same soul. The name Audrey is totally different than my dying/dead name, and I do feel quite an emotional connection to the name Audrey that I never had with my birth name. I'm also finding that as I come out to more people, they're all happy to call me Audrey and use she/her pronouns, even though they mess up sometimes since it's new and an adjustment. I feel like the clear break represents an acceptance that Audrey is me. Early on in my transition, that is hugely affirming and gives me warm fuzzies inside!

 

Love,

~Audrey.

Link to comment

My experience is very similar to Audrey's. My new name doesn't resemble at all my given name. I always felt completely detached from my given name (now I know it was dysphoria, with a helping of other issues - it was my late older sister name). It was only a sound that I responded to, but never felt like me. It has been astounding to me to feel how my new name lights a warm feeling in my chest every time someone uses it. Now I feel they refer to ME, I feel seen.

 

So yes, names are important.

Link to comment

I haven't really gone by my "official" name.  Never have liked it.  Almost everyone I've known for years uses the nickname.  When some body addresses me by it, I know that it is someone that doesn't know me.  They usually want something.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I just checked, and my male name was in the top-50 for my birth year.  My female name, Kathleen, is top-20.  Moving up in the world!  My middle names, both male and female, are in the top 300.

 

I didn't need a clean break from my old name.  I am the same person I always was, so some continuity is good.  What I needed though was a name that was unambiguously feminine.  Kathy does that for me.  It sounds a bit like my old name, but no one would ever assume male if they heard the name Kathy.

Link to comment

My "dead-name" Michael was #1 in 1968. And my true name Holly was #103 at the same time in 68. Lisa was in the top spot in 1968 for a girl. Lisa is a pretty name.

 

Can I just say I hate the term "Dead-Name", just sounds so morbid.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I agree with @HollyNoel the dead name is not good - how about "no longer using birth name" or "replaced name".

 

Wikipedia offers the following

 

Deadnaming is the use of the birth or other former name (i.e. a name that is "dead") of a transgender or non-binary person without their consent.[1] Intentional deadnaming is sometimes used to "aggressively dismiss and reject" a person's gender identity and the name that accompanies it, which they may consider deeply disrespectful.[1][2]

Background[edit]

Part of a series on
Transgender topics
     
Health care and medicine[show]
Rights issues[show]
Society and culture[show]
Theory and concepts[show]
See also[show]
Nuvola LGBT flag.svg LGBT portal
Portal Transgender.svg Transgender portal

The practice of deadnaming has elicited considerable controversy. Supporters of transgender identity normalization argue that deadnaming is part of the hostile environment experienced by trans individuals.[3] Deadnaming can also be done accidentally by people who are otherwise-supportive of trans individuals, such as supportive family members or longtime friends who have not yet become accustomed to using an individual's new name. Repeated failures to avoid deadnaming, however, can be seen as a failure to practice allyship.[4] Deadnaming can be overt aggression or subtle microaggression indicating that the target is not fully recognized as a member of a society.[5]

Even among those who support trans identities, there is dispute about the appropriateness both of the act of deadnaming, and deadnaming as a legitimate concept. Christopher Reed, a professor of history and scholar of queer culture, argued that deadnaming "inhibits efforts toward self-acceptance and integration."[6] Others have argued that the freedom to deadname is not covered within the principles of academic freedom.[7] Disputes surrounding the legitimacy of deadnaming have led to acrimonious disputes within the queer community, with some believing that deadnaming itself is a tangible harm, and others arguing that the move to prevent deadnaming is tantamount to "re-education camp."[8]

Queer scholars have theorized that trans people insist on preventing deadnaming in part as a strategy of self-assertion for what is to come: "by insisting on the primacy of the present, by seeking to erase the past, or even by emotionally locating their 'real self' in the future, that elusive place where access (to transition, health care, housing, a livable wage, and so on) and social viability tend to appear more abundant."[9] Correcting deadnaming by third parties is cited as a way to support trans people.[4]

Obstacles[edit]

Attempts to stop being deadnamed can sometimes result in significant bureaucratic and administrative obstacles for trans people. The legal name change itself costs time, money and effort; further, changing corresponding information such as names, emails, class schedules in some institutions (such as school) can be difficult.[5] For example, the design of the ride sharing app Lyft makes it extremely difficult for trans people to change their name in the app.[10]

Link to comment

I don't know why, but for so reason I don't mind the girly first name my mommy monster bestowed upon me. She's a huge Trekkie and named me after the nurse in Star Trek. I'm not even religious, but I like it regardless. Plus people tend to butcher my name anyway, I'm mainly called by the short version, which is unisexed enough to satisfy the weirdness. My last name however, is a crime against humanity. Can't fit the damn thing on anything all my documents rarely have the full thing... Not even my state ID.  I always used Drago on the internet. I lack imagination and I'm a dragon in mind, heart, and soul. It's short, simple and satisfies my interests. Mx. is just a title to state things as they stand, not just a Ms. or Mr.

Link to comment

One thing I thought about, as I was preparing to sign in here, was... is it legitimate to adopt a (in my case) feminine username as a way of recognizing my inner gender identity although I'm not doing anything to express it outwardly & have no plans to do so? In the end I came to the conclusion that, for me at least, it was not. Hence my username: Overalls Bear. 

 

 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, Overalls Bear said:

One thing I thought about, as I was preparing to sign in here, was... is it legitimate to adopt a (in my case) feminine username as a way of recognizing my inner gender identity although I'm not doing anything to express it outwardly & have no plans to do so? In the end I came to the conclusion that, for me at least, it was not. Hence my username: Overalls Bear. 

 

 

You can be who ever you want to be. No judgement from any of us here. :)

Link to comment

@HollyNoel @Jandi Thank you both for your support. I have a complicated, one might even say contentious, relationship between my outwardly male persona and the alternate gender identity I've always kept deeply hidden. It tends to rear it's ugly head when I think about things like whether or not it's appropriate for me to have a feminine username. It becomes something of a slug-fest with my outward persona saying: "Of course not!" while my hidden gender identity says: "But why not? How come I always get the short end of the stick... or more accurately perhaps... no end of the stick at all?" ?

Link to comment
8 hours ago, Overalls Bear said:

@HollyNoel @Jandi Thank you both for your support. I have a complicated, one might even say contentious, relationship between my outwardly male persona and the alternate gender identity I've always kept deeply hidden. It tends to rear it's ugly head when I think about things like whether or not it's appropriate for me to have a feminine username. It becomes something of a slug-fest with my outward persona saying: "Of course not!" while my hidden gender identity says: "But why not? How come I always get the short end of the stick... or more accurately perhaps... no end of the stick at all?" ?

You do what you do, it's all cool so long as you okay with it. You give what you can, slow chip away that shell at your pace, be free. Your icon is adorable btw.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

You are who you are and that is beautiful. I personally wouldn't want you to be any other way. Be you.

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

I think that just like when we were born, we grow into our names and they become us.  I think some can get too worried about choosing the "right" name but there really isn't a wrong one.  If you can't decide just pick one and start using it, see what happens.  My hope is that you and your name grow together as you transition.

When I came out as Bri, no one really cared how or why I chose my name and no one judged it. (unlike telling people what you are thinking of naming your child! lol).  Some asked out of curiosity but that was it.  I picked it because when I first started thinking I was trans I took it on as a profile name in games and eventually I kinda liked it. I like that people knew me that way and by that name.   I grew into it as I came to accept that was who I really was.

Good luck to all in search of who they are and how they want to be called.

Hugs and Kisses

Bri

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      769.6k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,073
    • Most Online
      8,356

    valeonie
    Newest Member
    valeonie
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Caridad
      Caridad
    2. Certbunnie
      Certbunnie
      (25 years old)
    3. EstherElle
      EstherElle
      (43 years old)
    4. Juliet
      Juliet
      (43 years old)
    5. MelissaAndProudOfIt
      MelissaAndProudOfIt
      (59 years old)
  • Posts

    • MaryEllen
      Any links posted would have to meet this criteria  All content posted or shared through TransPulse services must be appropriate for minors. We welcome members aged 13 to 18. As such, adult or pornographic content, nudity, underwear images, violence, gore, and other content not suitable for minors may not be posted anywhere to this service.
    • VickySGV
      I do spoken word acting, and give Trans 101 talks and other public speaking.  I wear make-up for those occasions.  Sephora is easy for me to get to, and has a foundation that does a good job for me and the sales folks there are Trans Friendly.  Their eye shadow pallets are also fun to use. Another source of my foundation is Ulta which carries Dermablend that does a consistent job of my lower face and chin.   I just use good old Revlon lipsticks because I ruin them by leaving my purse in the hot car too often.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I'm not interested in makeup, jewelry or nice clothes or girly stuff.  It's made me wonder at times.   It saves some money.  If I wore a skirt it would likely  be denim.  I thought about a woman's skirt suit but nah.   Neither of my sisters are into that stuff either.  One likes peasant chic (still a 60s flower girl)  and the other - the only time she has ever worn a dress was at her wedding.  Jeans at all other times.   Jeans and t shirt here.  Content being a girl.  Weirdo. Weirda? Never mind.
    • Breanne_O
      Thanks, Mindy.
    • VickySGV
      @Ladypcnj Before posting links to other group's websites, PM one of the Staff (preferably an Admin) and have them check that site out.   We have specific rules here regarding age appropriateness and would need to know that the other site is in line with those rules.  We do have members here between 13 and 18 and other sites need to be safe for that age range, legally and otherwise.  Also, we are not a dating or pick-up site, not do we allow people selling things to advertise here.  As I said clear the link with a moderator or admin before posting it.  Mod's and admins do check out posts and if we find problem links we will remove them and notify the OP of a rules violation.  Go to https://www.transgenderpulse.com/community-rules to understand where we are.
    • Ladypcnj
      I raise my hand in the group, I have a question and a suggestion... is it allowed to share other new lgbtq+ website links here? 
    • Ladypcnj
      Yeah, ELF is a good brand, another brand is Revlon ColorStay last 24 hours.
    • RaineOnYourParade
      Sir is good, as well as mister! I don't mind Mx. but my brain's first thought is a mixer.
    • missyjo
      giggles..sounds much more comfy   I'm on 5 minute break outside n wondering if i can open my blouse..oops..maybe not ..laughs
    • kristinabee
      I really don't think that's a good idea. The unity of the LGB and T community is historic and has been central for both groups rights. And the vast majority of people advocating for splitting the two are transphobic LGB's who are broadly condemned by the community anyway.
    • Mmindy
      Congratulations, and best wishes as you move forward.   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Breanne_O
      A bit late in updating, but I've had the draft of the official diagnosis and have (as yet unconfirmed) an endo consultation next month.   Next to arrive will be the supporting documentation for my new passport application for my correct gender.  This will then be my official ID for all the other updates - bank, tax, payroll etc.   It just feels good to to be proactive again rather than waiting for other people to move at a leisurely pace.  
    • Birdie
      I like ELF brand cosmetics, I can pick them up at JC Penny.    I wear makeup everyday, but mostly just very light makeup. 
    • Cynthia Slowan
      Charlize, Mindy, and April Marie, thanks so much for the warm welcome!!  I can already tell that I am going to feel at home here and I look forward to interacting and getting to know everyone!!                                            💗 Cynthia 
    • Vidanjali
      Hello & welcome, @Ali_Genderlfuid! Look forward to learning more about you. 
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...