Husband asks the world for help after fallout from secretive wife's choice of 'horrible' baby name
Choosing your child's name can get pretty complicated.

A young father cradles his newborn
Thereβs a fine line between a unique name and one that sets kids up for a lifetime of ridicule.
On the one hand, maybe it shouldnβt matter what other people think, and parents should pick a name that suits their preferences, consequences be damned. On the other hand, their kid might not appreciate that kind of bravery after enduring years of bullying during childhood, followed constant confusion at Starbucks and truly unenviable work emails once theyβre adults.
And this chapter of parenting can be a little stressfulβeven more stressful if neither partner can agree on a name they both like.

This was the case for a husband who absolutely hated a name his wife so eagerly wished to give their unborn son. But rather than follow the popular βone no, two yesesβ rule of baby-naming, where both parents must agree on the name chosen for a child, the wife instead went full steam ahead with her idea.
According to the husbandβs account on Reddit, hereβs what happened:
βMe (25m) and my wife (23f) are having our first child together. She is currently 9 months pregnant and could give birth anytime in the next couple of weeks. The only major fight we have had throughout her pregnancy happened a couple days ago, and it was about what we were going to name our kid.β
from AmItheAsshole
βIt all started when we found out the gender of the baby,β he continued. βAfter we found out we were having a boy we sat down together and made a list. Almost all of the names she suggested were normal, until the one that caused me to write this post. She suggested we name our son Mune.β
Mune. Likeβ¦dune an βm?β Or like βmun?β βMoon?β βMoney?β βMew-nay?β So many questions.
βShe told me the name was from this movie she watched when she was younger and that it always stuck with her,β the husband explained, saying that when he told her it felt a βlittle out thereβ and was worried their son might get made fun of.
After a little back and forth, the couple agreed to take the name Mune off the list. Or so the dad-to-be thought.
βLater on in her pregnancy her mom decided to throw a baby shower as it was her first grandchild. It was fine for the most part until we started to open the gifts. Most of them were normal baby things like diapers and bottles, until we got to her momβs gift. My wife opened the gift bag and pulled out a blue handmade blanket. It seemed normal enough at first until my wife unfolded it and low and behold there was the name Mune written on the blanket,β he wrote.
The man had tried to keep cool until after the party was over. However, when he confronted his wife about it, all hell seemed to break loose.
βShe got defensive and told me that it was a good name and that I was overreacting about it,β he concluded. βI brought up the earlier points and told her it was a stupid name for a kid and if she wanted to name something Mune so bad she could use the name for a dog. She got upset and called her mom to come get her. After she left she called me and told me she wouldnβt be coming back for a while. Everyone Iβve talked to about this has said Iβm not the asshole, but now that my wife has been gone and I've been thinking about it I feel like I could have handled the situation better.β
Yikes.

While the husband might have regretted his actions, public opinion overwhelmingly sided with him.
One mom wrote, βNaming a baby is a 2 yes or 1 no situation. You do not name a child something your partner does not agree with. You find a compromise. This is the start of many necessary compromises in life and it is a total AH move to unilaterally decide on a child's name despite your partner's misgivingsβ¦She is absolutely not mature enough for motherhood if she can not find a reasonable compromise on this.β
Another added βthis is a child, not a goldfish. There are consequences and repercussions to choosing a name that is very unusual to begin with.... To go behind the other parent's back and tell a grandparent what the name is going to be, that is unacceptable.β
Others noted how the wife and her mom βpulled a power play,β which βin itself is an a**hole move.β In addition, many pointed out that running away from the conflict (leaving to go to momβs house) might have not been the best way to handle the situation.

βLeaving so she doesnβt have to face the argument is actually a form of abuse if it happens a lot,β one person commented. βShe may just have baby brain and be overreacting due to hormones, but that is red flag behavior of it canβt be dismissed for reasons beyond her control.
And if thereβs any doubt as to just how damaging "weird" names can be, take it from this person:
βMy name has prevented me from doing anything that would have my name called out in a crowd of people. Never tried sports. Military was a no go. I don't even want to apply for higher positions at work because I don't want to have meetings in closed rooms where people might call my name.
ββ¦Being forced to grow up with a weird name discouraged me from a lot of things and I began resenting my parents for thinking they were being creative. I had to live with it through grade school and high school. The ridicule didn't end until the damage was already done.β
Raising a kid together is full of making compromises, prioritizing healthy communication, and honoring commitments, none of which are easy 100 percent of the time. But if couples canβt learn how to navigate these issues, then disagreeing on names is the least of their problems. We can all agree that parenting as true partners means men often need to step up their games. But it takes two for parenting to truly flourish and that includes respect your partner and making choices that are good for the entire family. Together.
This article originally appeared two years ago.






A woman is getting angry at her coworker.via
A man with tape over his mouth.via
A husband is angry with his wife. via 
Some Boomer grandparents are being called out for "gramnesia".

A woman gets a tattoo.
Boy playing on the computer.
Grumpy boomers aren't wrong about everything. Photo by
Even the young people can't stand QR codes. Photo by
Everything, even fast food, has gotten out of control expensive. Photo by