Allison and Roberto Carrera, a stay-at-home-mom and a Hispanic program director at a seminary, live in Louisville, Kentucky with their three children. After two daughters, Adele Gianna and Margo Anaís, they welcomed a son named Mercer Joaquin on August 14, 2021.
Below, we talk to Allison about how she and Roberto chose the baby name Mercer for their little boy.
I always keep a running baby name list on my phone in the notes app. Pregnant or not, I just keep it going, because you never know when you need a name! I’m always adding to the list. Mercer was on the list from our last pregnancy, with our daughter Margot, before we knew she was a girl.
I saw Mercer on a French baby names list. I tend to look for French names because they sound good in English and Spanish. My husband and I do not agree on names very easily — we have very different taste. He likes stronger, more masculine names like Vasco and Salvador, whereas I like old British man names like Rupert and Percy and Piers. He didn’t like any of those — they are too Anglican. Which is true!
Every once in a while, I would go through the name list and read it to Roberto. I’d say, “How about this one? What about this?” and would mark off the “maybes.” We would give it a break and then go back to the maybes. Mercer was the one we kept coming back to.
The only Mercer I know of is the children’s book author, Mercer Mayer, who wrote the Little Critter books. People know about him! And Mercer is also a common place name, at least where I’m from in Pennsylvania. People know Mercer County, Mercer Township, and those things. So it’s not an unfamiliar word, it’s just an uncommon name.
Their middle names all have more significance. Gianna means “the Lord is gracious,” Anaís means “grace,” and Joaquin means “God will judge.” I like that they all have spiritual significance to them.
A few days later, Roberto texted me and said “I told so-and-so that the baby’s name is Mercer Joaquin.” I was like, “You did? That’s the baby’s name?” I liked it, but I didn’t know it was decided! He said, “It is. That’s the baby’s name.”
It was solidified once he said it out loud. It felt right.
It’s such a difficult sweet spot. When we named Margot three years ago, I wasn’t expecting it to be as popular as it is now. But I wouldn’t change it because it fits her.
With Mercer, we weren’t expecting it to be received as unusual. More often than not, I’ve had people be like, “So where did you get Mercer?” I wasn’t prepared for that question, I guess because you don’t meet Mercers, but in my mind, it didn’t feel unusual. But not everyone is reading baby name blogs all the time!
I didn’t name my child Moon Unit! I’m not Frank Zappa! Sometimes it just feels like that’s the response I get. But people in their 20s, 30s, or anyone who’s a name nerd is like, “That’s a cool name!”
My older daughter Adele would come up with suggestions that were nonsensical words, like Fluffy. Sometimes things that weren’t even words, so no serious suggestions. Chancho was the most notable one.
We learned from having previous children that you don’t really need to invite a discussion about it. It was our baby and we got to choose the name. Unless of course. it was something where I needed to be mindful of initials looking weird or really negative connotations.
For the most part we’d say, “We decided it’s Mercer Joaquin.” If I had some names I liked and somebody asked, I’d say, “I really like Lars,” without saying that was the baby’s name.
This strategy worked well for us. I didn’t want to keep it a secret because I’m not good at that. And when my friends have babies, I’m like, “Oh! What are you going to name it?” It’s exciting! But I wanted to be more assertive, so people knew it wasn’t open for their input.
With our daughters, we found that French baby names worked well in both English and Spanish and so I then narrowed my focus to primarily French names. I read and reread themost popular French names list and went down a deep rabbit hole of top baby names in various French provinces and towns.
And lastly, if you're looking for that unicorn of a baby name, look in obscure places and read a variety of name blogs. I used Appellation Mountain's Sunday Summary posts for this regularly because she does the heavy lifting of finding interesting name posts and having them available in one place to peruse.
Thank you so much, Allison!
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Sophie Kihm has been writing for Nameberry since 2015. She has contributed stories on the top 2020s names, Gen Z names, and cottagecore baby names. Sophie is Nameberry’s resident Name Guru to the Stars, where she suggests names for celebrity babies. She also manages the Nameberry Instagram and Pinterest.
Sophie Kihm's articles on names have run on People, Today, The Huffington Post, and more. She has been quoted as a name expert by The Washington Post, People, The Huffington Post, and more. You can follow her personally on Instagram or Pinterest, or contact her at [email protected]. Sophie lives in Chicago.
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