Nurse asked colleagues to share the most 'unhinged' baby name they ever heard. They delivered.
Imagine meeting twins named "Brock Lee and Callie Flower.”
Parents…why?
In the latest segment of “unhinged” TikTok trends, a NICU nurse named Victoria asked her fellow colleagues to share names that, as she wrote, “would send the Social Security office into a coma.”
And honestly, who would get exposed to more baffling baby names than nurses? No one. Victoria herself shared with Today that some of her top hits include Dracula, Messiah and Bronze and Gold.
So you can bet the answers were plentiful and, well, unhinged. Check below for our favorites:
“Blessica.”
“Ho’nasty - pronounced honesty…”
“Lucifer ... Oddly enough I took care of another baby named Messiah the same night."
“I work in pediatric dentistry and we have a kid named Sheep."
"L&D nurse here: Phelony."
Poor Phelony. Photo credit: Canva
“Dietician in a behavioral speech hospital…kid with oppositional disorder named nemesis."
“Arealtruemiracle. All one word.”
“Candida…I BEG people to research names before giving them to children.”
“Hella Shady.”
“Demon (pronounced duh-mawn)”
“Narwhal ... His name was Narwhal.”
“Frijoles Guacamole. On my life not joking. We secretly keep a bad baby name book to remind us of all the crazy first and middle names.”
“Russell, which isn’t bad except the middle name is Mania. Russell Mania.”
Many of the twin names were especially outrageous:
There's gotta some twins out there named Thing One and Thing Two. Poor souls. Photo credit: Canva
“Twins in the NICU — one boy, one girl — named Brock Lee and Callie Flower.”
“Twins: Donwanna and Doneeda…last name Mann.”
“Ya’highness and Ya’majesty. Spelled exactly like that.”
“Twins named Michael and Lil Michael. Mom threatened to beat me up when I laughed. I didn’t know she was serious.”
“Not a nurse but worked on the postpartum floor; twins named Abracadabra and Alacazam.”
“Canon and Crystal. Their last name is Ball.”
And some triplet names for good measure:
“Today, tomorrow, a to’yesterday”
“Teacher here. I had triplets: Lincoln, Mercedes and Bentley.”
As one person noted, these, ahem, unique choices are undoubtedly why some countries have stringent naming laws. Iceland, for instance, has only 4,000 pre-approved baby names. Parents who wish to use a name not on the approved list must petition a three-person naming committee.
Did you know the most popular girl's name in Iceland is Emilia? Photo credit: Canva
However, while that kind of guidance might make sense (to protect kids from being on the receiving end of less-than-desirable monikers) some places do have rules that might seem a little outdated to modern sensibilities—forcing names that indicate matching genders, for example.
Even in America, certain names, like Adolf Hitler, III, and Messiah (though clearly some folks are getting away with that last one) are illegal. Still, there are far less regulations, and therefore, stories like this one.