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Family Sides With Sister Who Stole OP’s Baby Name, Now They Want OP To Change Hers Twice

by Katy Nguyen
December 9, 2025
in Social Issues

Baby names tend to bring out surprising levels of emotion, especially when family traditions or beloved relatives are involved.

What feels like a sweet gesture to honor someone can quickly turn into a tug of war when more than one person has the same idea.

In this situation, a mother expecting her second daughter found herself navigating a maze of expectations, broken agreements, and a sudden conflict she didn’t anticipate.

A name meant to honor a shared grandmother somehow became ammunition in a bigger family dispute.

Family Sides With Sister Who Stole OP's Baby Name, Now They Want OP To Change Hers Twice
Not the actual photo

'AITA for not changing my baby's name AGAIN after I changed it for my sister once already?'

All names are fake. I have a 9-year-old daughter, and another on the way.

I had 2 grandmothers: "Annie" and "Rose". I named my oldest "Annabelle" after nanny Annie, whose full name was also Annabelle.

I did not name her after Nana Rose, as at the time she was born, Nana Rose was still with us.

When I found out I was pregnant with a second, I decided to name her after Nana Rose, who passed in 2017.

My sister, "Lucy", got pregnant about 5 months before me. She says that she wants to name her baby Rose, after Nana Rose.

I say our kids can share the name.

She says I already have Annabelle, and I could have named her Annabelle Rose or something, but passed up the chance, so I can't also have Rose.

I figure this is not the hill to die on, so I say I'll look for something else, but reserve the right to use Rose.

I then crack open a baby book, and a few entries after "Rose" is "Rosalie". It's perfect.

Honours nana Rose, doesn't p__s off Lucy, and my boyfriend loves it.

Lucy finds out the new name and says it's lovely and she approves, which annoys me, but I say nothing.

This all takes place in the 8th month of her pregnancy, 3rd month of mine, so I don't even know the gender yet, and this is all hypothetical.

A couple of weeks later, Lucy gives birth. A few days ago, about a month after birth, she announced that her daughter's name is Rosalie.

At this point, I'm really annoyed because I went to great lengths to leave the name Rose available, and she's nicked my choice.

Mum calls me to say she knew what Lucy was planning, and she hopes I'm not upset, because this means I can now name my incoming daughter Rose.

Except I'm now attached to Rosalie. I tell Mum that I'm sticking with Rosalie.

She says Lucy has Rosalie, I say there's going to be 2 Rosalies in the family.

She says this is impractical as both Rosalies will have the same surname (sister is a single mum, boyfriend is taking my name)

and they will likely be in the same school and year group, so this will cause all manner of issues.

I say if it's going to be an issue, then I'll deal with it if/when it comes up.

Lucy then calls me, calling me an inconsiderate p__ck, and says I'm being petty, that I don't have a monopoly on the name,

and that she can name her kid what she likes.

I said that's all true, so by that same logic, I can use Rosalie.

She says there can't be 2 Rosalies, as it'll cause problems, and I say she's the one who has a problem with it,

so she can change her kid's name or deal with it.

She again called me an inconsiderate, spiteful, arse, and hung up. Mum, Dad, and our brother all side with Lucy. AITA?

Edit: I appreciate the alternate name suggestions that stem from Ros(e)(alie), and I do find reading them interesting,

but I did say that all names are fake, so, in the nicest way possible, Ros(e)(alie) inspired names aren't really helping me lol.

Also, it has been confirmed that I'm having a girl.

The escalation in this story began with a small gesture of accommodation that turned into a pattern of one-sided compromise.

Naming a child is already an emotionally saturated task, but when layered with sibling dynamics, sentiment, and legacy, the stakes quietly intensify. That’s exactly what unfolded here.

From OP’s perspective, she acted in good faith twice: first by stepping aside when her sister Lucy claimed Rose, and again by choosing Rosalie, a name she loved, one that still honored their grandmother, and one Lucy explicitly approved.

The shock came when Lucy used Rosalie herself and then insisted OP must change her own baby’s name again for the sake of “practicality.”

OP understandably saw this as moving the goalposts. Beneath her irritation sits a deeper truth, she had already compromised once, and the sister who demanded that compromise didn’t hold herself to the same rule.

Lucy’s response, meanwhile, suggests a familiar emotional pattern in families. Sibling relationships are often shaped by old hierarchies and unconscious competition.

Research on identity formation notes that early family roles tend to reemerge in adulthood when siblings face emotionally symbolic decisions.

A 2014 article in Developmental Psychology explains that early relational experiences “continue to influence behavior and meaning-making in later interpersonal interactions.”

This naming conflict isn’t only about the babies, it’s also about longstanding dynamics resurfacing under pressure.

To understand why this situation feels so charged, it helps to look at how names operate within families.

A peer-reviewed study in Names: A Journal of Onomastics highlights that naming a child is “a deeply personal act tied to narrative identity,” arguing that parents embed meaning, memory, and symbolic connection in the names they choose.

For OP, Rosalie had become a narrative anchor, the name she imagined calling her daughter, the bridge to a beloved grandmother, and the compromise that kept her family at peace. Losing that name, not once, but twice, would naturally feel like losing part of that envisioned story.

There is also a modern cultural layer: parents today place increasing value on uniqueness in names.

A 2024 study on naming trends found that younger parents often avoid repeated or family-duplicate names because names serve as “signals of individuality and distinctiveness.”

This makes OP’s attachment to the specific name even more understandable; it wasn’t just a “similar” name she liked, it was the name she connected to her child.

A neutral path forward would involve OP stating her position clearly without escalating the emotional charge.

She might acknowledge that Lucy probably acted from insecurity or urgency, not malice, while reinforcing that she cannot repeatedly abandon names she loves because someone else changes their mind.

If the two cousins eventually share the name Rosalie, the family can navigate the practicalities just as many others do. Duplicate names may be uncommon, but they’re hardly catastrophic.

In the end, this story illustrates how names become vessels for memory, meaning, and belonging.

OP’s experience shows that the conflict was never about the mechanics of having two Rosalies in one family, it was about one sister repeatedly shaping the boundaries while expecting the other to shrink around her.

Holding onto Rosalie isn’t spite; it’s OP reclaiming the right to choose her child’s story without someone else rewriting it first.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

These commenters backed OP and criticized the sister for spitefully stealing names and engineering unnecessary drama.

4thxtofollowtherules − NTA, but honestly, your first mistake was giving in and negotiating with your emotional terrorist sister.

LynnieFran − NTA, but I wish people would stop telling others what names they choose.

captainsadlyplank − NTA, but your sister is. I've worked with cousins in the same company who had the same first,

middle, and surnames, and they weren't the only ones in the family with that name.

It was funny, but no big deal. As someone says, give her an awesome middle name, and she can choose what she goes by as she gets older.

dominiqlane − NTA. In the future, don’t tell anyone your child’s name until after they’re born.

MelonKanon − You know what? NTA. I usually think name arguments are stupid. You keep that name and give the kid a kick ass middle name.

She knew what she was doing, out of spite. You literally went out of your way so she gets the hell over it.

thesquatz − NTA yet for being frustrated with your sister.

She’s put you in a weird situation for no reason other than to be difficult (and other people in your family let her, so that’s also very frustrating and bizarre).

That said, I do think you WBTA if you name your daughter the same name just because you love it, or it might spite your sister.

If, as you say, there’s a likely chance that they will be doing things together, it will probably be irritating for them to have to deal with it all the...

Kids are brutal and also sensitive- why set your kids up to dislike or resent each other just because you like a name?

Also, there’s a good chance that if you both choose the name, it will come up with your kids, and you’re going to have to be very careful not to...

Their names will literally be synonymous with conflict, and that isn’t good for anyone, let alone kids.

In fairness, I am likely biased because I was named after someone in the family, and I ended up changing my name, and it became a huge deal to everyone...

I wish my parents hadn’t gotten so attached to a name that they made me suffer through having it, even though it made me uncomfortable. Don’t do that to your...

Kids are people who are going to grow up and live with certain decisions that they didn’t necessarily make.

Decisions made for kids should be done in service to the kid- not the parent. You may love the name- you’ve built a relationship, and it means something to you.

Your kid isn’t going to have that relationship with it; they may appreciate the memory of Nana Rose,

but they aren’t going to have known her as you have, so the bulk of their relationship to their name will

come from their experience of it, which sounds like it will be an issue.

This group declared everyone sucks here. They felt both sisters turned a sentimental gesture into a competitive turf war, ignoring long-term issues for the cousins.

minislice − ESH. Sister is petty and sucks for stealing Rosalie. But you are making it just as big a deal.

What actual “great lengths” did you go to to keep the name Rose available? Looking into another name?

That’s a bit of an exaggeration. It shouldn’t be a contest over honoring grandma.

The fighting and petty childish name competition is reflective of selfish motivations rather than the honoring of someone deceased.

Do what's best for your child. Shouldn’t that matter more?

kassandraknoxxx − ESH because this could cause issues for your daughter. Think of her in this.

For example, what if cousin Rosalie posts something inappropriate on social media while your Rosalie is looking for a job?

Of course, this happens to unrelated people, but these 2 may look alike and will be from the same area.

And your Rosalie (along with her cousin) will have to deal with the irritating consequences of having the exact same name at the same school.

I don’t think you’re thinking about your daughter here, only how mad you are at your a__hole sister.

I’ve watched my father and a friend of mine deal with having the exact same name as their cousin, and it ranges

from an annoyance to an actual problem (the job example happened to my friend).

Don’t make your daughter the “other” Rosalie to your sister’s “original” Rosalie. It’s not fair to her.

Alseids − ESH if you keep the name. Hear me out. Don't change the name for your sister.

Do it for your daughter. You don't want her name to be evidence of your sister's petty schemes.

You may think it's no big deal to have the same name as someone else, but it's definitely going to cause issues. Don't do it, it's not worth it.

Give your daughter her own name and don't feel like you're backing down from your sister,

but rather stepping up for your daughter. Do the right thing.

babycallmemabel − ESH, I know I'm in the minority here, but I do feel that after your firstborn, a conversation

should've been had with your sister as to what would happen if either of you were to have another daughter,

given you'd already taken one grandmother's name. If not, then at least when she became pregnant.

From my understanding here, there were only two grandmothers to both of you, and you've intended to

claim both their names without considering if your sister wanted to honour them also.

I agree that going ahead with the plan to name your daughter "Rosalie" would cause a lifetime of confusion

should they stay in the same city, and would personally urge you to reconsider the name

(maybe your husband, as some sweet grandparents in his life?) and add "Rosalie" as a middle name?

However, your sister was also wrong to take the alternate name you had come up with, and it seems very petty

of her and even your mother, who seemingly knew but decided not to let you in on her knowledge until after the birth.

Noclevername12 − ESH, I think. That said, if they weren’t going to the same school, I would be like, just go ahead and do what you want.

But I think having two kids with the same exact name in the same school and grade sounds like an absolute nightmare,

and I would not do that to myself as the parent, let alone them.

Wait till their standardized test scores get mixed up.

MrAvalanche1981 − ESH to an extent. I kinda agree with the sister that since you used the name Annabelle, she should be allowed to use Rose.

I think you suck a bit since knowing you couldn't use Rose, you chose a name virtually identical to Rose, and probably would have called her Rose for short.

Now, the sister was an AH for using that name, but it was pretty much a block of both girls being named Rose or a version of Rose.

Had you chosen any other name that wasn't virtually a carbon cop of Rose, and she then used that name, I would say NTA.

LightObserver − ESH. Are we just going to ignore the first half of this story, in which OP decides she wants the name 'Rose'...

AFTER her sister was already pregnant and had already said she wanted the name?

OP totally tried to push her sister into letting her have 'Rose' even though the sister claimed it first.

Not to mention, both these grandmothers were the sisters' grandmothers, too!

I don't think it's unreasonable for OP to get one grandma's name, and her sister to get the other.

That said, obviously, it was an AH move for the sister to then turn around and steal the new name OP picked out.

Maybe it was out of revenge. Who knows.

At any rate, both of them at least tried to steal names from each other, so they both suck.

These commenters judged OP harshly, saying she overreached by taking one grandmother’s name already and then attempting to secure the other.

toastycookies86 − YTA, you are using your baby as a pawn. Use Rosalie as the middle name and find a different first name.

Or a first name and middle name pairing that are both short and sound good together, like Lila Rose.

You’re making it a much bigger problem than it is.

briannad474 − Unpopular, but I’m going with YTA.

First, you attempt to take both grandma names without even consulting your months-ahead-of-you pregnant sister, then get flippant when your sister wants to use HER grandmother’s name for her child.

Then, you crack open the old google, type in “name alternatives to Rose,” see Rosalie in the search results

without even needing to click on a website, and call that “great lengths” to accommodate your sister,

when honestly she’s the one with a strong case for first dibs on the name with her baby coming first and you already having a grandma name.

After all that, you’re annoyed that your sister approves of the name that’s a longer version of the original name.

Were you hoping she’d throw a fit so you’d look NTA and justified in just going ahead with Rose?

Yeah, your sister is annoying for taking your name, but it seems to me it’s in response to you attempting to

hijack both your (and just as equally your sister’s!!!) grandmothers’ names from the jump, so really I don’t see her as the AH here.

Then, after ALL THAT, you want to torture not only her kid but yours as well for their entire lives in the name of

being petty by giving them the same name & stripping them both of their own identities.

By the time the dust settled, two sisters were fighting over a name that belonged to a grandmother they both adored, and the OP was left wondering if compromise was ever going to satisfy someone determined to claim the spotlight.

Was the OP justified in keeping the name she chose first, or did doubling down make the conflict worse? And how would you navigate a sibling who keeps shifting the goalposts? Share your verdict in the comments, this one’s a soap opera.

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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