What happens when two sisters end up with the exact same name not by coincidence, but because their father and his new partner chose it deliberately? One Redditor found herself in that bizarre family saga after attending the hospital to meet her daughter’s new baby sister.
Instead of cooing over a sweet newborn, she was floored when the couple introduced the baby with the same name as her 10-year-old daughter. Cue hospital drama, accusations of jealousy, and one mom calling her co-parent “spineless” while labeling his girlfriend “creepy.”
The internet has a lot to say about whether this naming choice is a quirky coincidence or a calculated move to erase boundaries.
One mom’s efforts to foster a close sibling bond for her daughter hit a wall when her ex and his girlfriend named their new baby the same as her 10-year-old















OP edited the post:


This is one of those stories where you read it twice just to make sure you didn’t hallucinate the details. OP brought her 10-year-old daughter to meet her new baby sister, only to find the baby had been given… the exact same first name. Same surname too, since they share a father.
It’s not “inspired by” or “a tribute,” but a full duplication. OP, understandably, lost her temper and labeled the father “spineless” and his partner “creepy.”
From OP’s perspective, this is less about naming rights and more about respect. To her, it feels like an erasure or replacement attempt, an act that disregards the identity her daughter has built over a decade.
From the girlfriend’s side, she insists it’s “just a pretty name” with no malice intended. But to outside observers, it reeks of tension, jealousy, and poor judgment. Even OP’s co-parent seemed too embarrassed to make eye contact, suggesting he knows it’s indefensible.
The broader issue here ties into family dynamics and identity. Psychologists note that names carry deep symbolic weight in children’s self-concept.
Research from the Journal of Family Psychology highlights that siblings with overlapping or confusing names often report higher feelings of rivalry and diminished individuality. Naming a baby isn’t just about aesthetics; it’s about carving out a distinct place in the family structure.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Jean Twenge, author of The Narcissism Epidemic, once observed: “Names are a way parents signal uniqueness and value to a child. If that identity feels undermined, it can affect how children see their place in the family.” In this case, the “signal” to OP’s daughter may be: you are interchangeable. That’s not a message any 10-year-old should receive.
What should OP do? Anger is natural, but solutions lie in calmly confronting the father away from the girlfriend’s postpartum bubble. This isn’t just OP’s fight; it’s about advocating for her daughter’s dignity. Legal or custody implications aside, she may want to encourage her daughter to express her feelings directly to her father, he needs to grasp the emotional fallout.
Check out how the community responded:
These users called the girlfriend’s choice creepy and potentially malicious, suspecting an attempt to replace the older daughter






Some urged custody reevaluation





This group highlighted the practical and social issues of identical names




Some called the decision bizarre, questioning the father’s motives


One emphasized the disrespect to both sisters and the baby’s future embarrassment




Naming a baby should be about celebration, not identity theft. Instead, one Redditor found herself watching her daughter’s name transplanted onto her newborn half-sister, raising questions about replacement, favoritism, and basic logic.
So, was she wrong for calling the father “spineless” and the girlfriend “creepy”? Or was she the only adult brave enough to say what everyone else in the room was already thinking? What would you do if your child suddenly had a sibling… with the same name?









