I guess... I don't know. I'm totally okay with using names from other cultures, but I feel like I have a limit.
Like, I really like
Ai and
Mio, Japanese names. I wouldn't use them as first names, though. And I wouldn't feel comfortable using something like Matsumoto or Akutagawa, something where it's long and feels completely foreign. If that makes sense? Like to me, it has to sort of feel familiar. I'd use
Parisa but not
Parastoo, you know?
(Though, I guess if I actually liked more complicated foreign names, it'd be different? HM. This is kind of complicated. I think ultimately I'm not afraid of borrowing from other cultures.)
I can't imagine how, say, a Japanese person, would feel if I
did give a daughter
Mio as a first name, because I do agree with your feeling of not relating to a particular culture.
Any kid of mine is going to be a walking buffet anyway. Like their surname will be Irish and mine is
German and my mom's maiden name was
made up and my Grandma's maiden name is Polish. Look, four generations of people and all of their surnames are of different origins, what is that.
--
I don't really like when people pick names from "their" culture just because it's their culture, though. Americans, I mean. Like, my boyfriend is like "oh what about an Irish name" because his family is very proud of their Irishness, so I pulled up BTN and went to like
Caoimhe or something and was like "Ok, can you pronounce this one? Because if you want an Irish name we're using a real Irish name and not
Ryan or something."
This message was edited 7/17/2011, 8:46 AM