Anna, a foster care manager, and Mitchell, a property analyst, live in North Dakota with their daughters: Mara Josephine and Olive Rebecca.
Their youngest, Olive, was born on September 29, 2021. Below, we speak to Anna about how she and Mitch named their daughter Olive Rebecca.
Olive was Mitch’s great-grandma’s name. He had really sweet memories of his great-grandma, but even more, he wanted to name our daughter Olive for his grandma, Olive’s daughter. It means so much to her.
Mitch told his dad that he wanted to name the baby Olive, but no one else. I was like, “he told his dad — we can’t go back on this now!” And I fell in love with the name over time. I’m glad his grandma had a really nice name that I loved!
My older daughter Mara has a name that everyone knows and has heard, but there’s never going to be a bunch in her class. We wanted something like that for Olive, too. It feels like that sweet spot between different and special and familiar. Even though I know Olive is coming back in style now!
We decided on Olive so quickly, there weren’t a lot of names that we were looking at. We did that eight-week blood test, so we found out we were having a girl really early.
Part of the problem is that all of the honor names that we would want to use are taken within the family. Olive has three cousins named after my dad already. Or they’re just those more common, really traditional names. I love those names, just not for my children. Mara and Olive are a little bit different, so we don’t want a brother to have a boring and basic name.
When we look for boy names, we always want something strong and simple, but that also has meaning to us. We haven’t quite found that yet, but my husband really likes Abram for a boy. It’s his great-great-grandpa’s name. He’s been finding a lot of inspiration back in the family tree. I don’t know about Abram yet, though.
Rebecca is my sister’s name, and I would have used it whether I liked her name or not. And if we have a boy, his middle name will probably be Peter, after my brother.
Rebecca is four years older than me. Mara is four years older than Olive, and I hope that they’re as close as Becky and I are. We lived in the same city for the first three years of Mara’s life, and we’re just best friends. She babysat Mara every night so I could go to my grad school classes, and they were inseparable. I just wanted to honor the big role my sister has had in my daughters’ lives.
Becky lives in Nebraska now for her medical residency, so she’s only gotten to meet Olive for a few days. I really wanted to show her how important she is to our family.
I did ask my sister if, in her opinion, Olive was too close to Olivia and people would think they’re the same name. And I asked for ideas from friends and family members.
Mara gave us some pretty wild ideas. Peen was one. And Scooby-Doo.
I’m the youngest of eight kids, and we all have very traditional names. But the names my mom was suggesting were very out of left field for her, like Tatiana and Rosemary, which I love and would totally use.
I told my parents the name because I was excited about it, and Mitch’s dad knew, but we didn’t tell anyone else. We wanted it to be a surprise for Mitch’s side of the family because the original Olive was pretty significant to all of them.
Mara, who was three at the time, was really excited about the name too, and told pretty much the entire family. It was so cute — they were pretending not to know at first, but they knew her name was Olive.
We had assumed that Mara told her great-grandma— Olive’s daughter — but somehow the one person we wanted to keep it from never found out. When Olive was born, she was so surprised and touched. She texted us, “I wanted to call but I just can’t stop crying!” It ended up being perfect.
Becky was really excited and surprised too. She kept calling the baby “Olive Rebecca” when she was here.
When Mitch and I first got together, we would have chosen more out-there names. We started dating when we were 18 and 19, and when you talk about names back then, it’s so different than naming a baby. The choices on our list were hipster names. I still stand by the names as super cool, but not when you’re thinking about the kid wearing them their whole life.
Even just a couple years ago, we were thinking Odessa for a girl. I still really love it. We were thinking of Jaco, after Jaco Pastorius, the bass player. It’s cool but kind of weird!
Girl names follow the trends as well, but the names are more different. There are fun names like Genevieve and Penelope. Names that were big in 2017, when these kids were born. Those are names that I wouldn’t have chosen because I wouldn’t think my kid could say that! But the preschoolers can pronounce them.
There’s a Maris, Sydney, and Cedar in Mara’s class. I’ve noticed multiple girls with Native American heritage named Cedar.
I really like that Anna is feminine, short, and so simple, I don’t need a nickname. I did that with the girls’ names, too. My sister Becky, for example, has only gone by Becky, even though her full name is Rebecca. Olive can go by Liv if she wants, but she won’t need a nickname right off the bat.
It always seems like such a daunting thing to choose someone’s name. It’s not like we take it lightly, but every time we’ve had to choose a baby name we’ve just been like, “okay, that’s it.” It was really easy to say, “That’s going to be the name.”
Be creative and find something you really love. And once you know for sure, just be confident in it.
Thank you so much, Anna!
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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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