I wouldn't worry about this.
I have a son born in '87, during the "Jason and Jennifer era". I had no idea about that "era" until after he was born and heard about it on TV and started reading parenting magazines and saw articles. Didn't bother me at all. My son's name, no matter how popular in the coutnry, was still unique to my son, to me. We called him Jay or Jay-Jay for short sometimes which made it more unique to him.
I had my second son in '95. He was born Alexander Joseph, AJ for short. When he started school there were (and still are) plenty of boys named Alex and girls with some variation of Alexa, and even an AJ or two through the years. His name to us is still unique because it fit him to a T. (I picked the name Alexander from the TV show Star Trek: The Next Generation, as there was a cute Klingon child named Alexander. Imagine AJ trying to explain that to his friends, lol)
We then had our triplets in '04. Imagine our dilema trying to pick out names for three!
1) Well, we knew for sure we wanted our one girl to be named Emma Sarah, after my grandmother who was deceased and was full German. (my husband is Spanish, lol) We wanted that name for years. At the time, the name Emma had made a big come back and there are Emmas everywhere! (Rachel on Friends had an Emma) We didn't change our mind because to us, there is only one "Emma". We liked the name and was from my grandmother. Emma thinks it's neat that there are Emmas everywhere. There's an Emma next door to us. An Emma in her ballet calls so the teacher calls her "Emma Sarah" to tell them apart, which she likes. There's an Emma in her preschool class and they just use last initials when needed, and neither minds. If things get mixed up they just laugh and switch papers.
2) Jamison Mitchell was chosen from a friend that my husband worked with years ago. He just loved the name and planned on naming one of his son's this. AJ did't fit the name when he was in the womb, so it went to one of the triplets that seemed to fit it. It's not as popular but we also get people mispronouncing "Jamison" often, for some strange reason, and misspelling it. We call him Jamie or James for short.
3) Then we have our Jacob. Yup, only about a hundred of them everywhere you go! But we picked it just because we liked it, and liked the short version of Jake as well. It seemed to fit him in the womb. We call him Jake or Jakey for short. It is unique to him because to us, there's only one Jake, lol. He has another Jacob in his speech group he goes to. The other goes by Jacob, ours goes by Jake. Both were happy with that and think it's neat that they share the same name.
I suggest embracing that those names are unique to your children. If they do say something down the road, remind them that there's is only one true Jacob or Jayden, and that it must be a GREAT name if someone else is sharing it too. At the end of the day, people aren't looking at the names, they're looking at the people and their personality.
K. B
mom to 5 including triplets
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