AITA for telling my sister what NOT to name her daughter?

When a family suffers the heartbreaking loss of a child, certain names become sacred. For one man and his wife, the name they chose for their daughter—lost at 16 weeks due to a fatal diagnosis—still carries deep love, grief, and remembrance years later. They honor her memory with candles and quiet moments, even after welcoming two healthy sons.

Now his heavily pregnant sister wants to give her own baby girl the exact same name. Despite repeated pleas to choose something else, she continues to include it on her shortlist, leaving the grieving brother to wonder if he’s unreasonable for demanding she respect their pain—or if she’s the one crossing a painful line.

‘AITA for telling my sister what NOT to name her daughter?’

The pain that still lingers every single day.

My wife and I had been trying to have a baby for several years, went through IVF, two miscarriages and when we finally got a viable embryo we found out...

We were absolutely devastated. We now have two healthy boys but we haven't forgotten our baby girl and think about her often, leave candles at the cemetery, etc.

A sister’s choice brings the grief rushing back.

My sister is 9 months pregnant and wants to give her baby the same name as our dead daughter. I've told her several times that the name is off-limits and...

But she's just texted me and my mum asking what we think about her shortlist of three names and that name was still on it.

The final confrontation and the silence that followed.

I've told her off and demanded she takes it off her list. She refuses to talk to me about it and wants to do as she pleases. Who's the a__hole...

Family names can carry immense emotional weight, especially when they’re tied to profound loss. In this situation, the brother isn’t trying to “claim” a name for future use; he’s asking his sister to respect the fact that this particular name belongs to a real child they loved, lost, and still actively grieve. The request isn’t about ownership in a legal sense—it’s about basic familial empathy.

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Opposing views often emphasize personal freedom: no one technically owns a name, and the sister has every right to choose what she loves for her daughter. Some argue the 16-week loss may not feel as significant to extended family members, so the emotional impact on the brother shouldn’t automatically dictate her decision. While this perspective is logically valid, it overlooks the lifelong ripple effect of seeing and hearing “their” daughter’s name attached to a living child at every family gathering, holiday, and casual conversation.

Ultimately, the broader social perspective here highlights how grief doesn’t follow neat timelines or shared intensity. What feels like a beautiful tribute to one person can feel like a reopened wound to another. Choosing kindness and countless alternative names over insistence demonstrates care for a sibling’s ongoing healing—something many consider the mark of close family bonds.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many readers passionately back the poster, calling out the sister’s choice as deeply insensitive and hurtful.

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Trevena_Ice − INFO: Is it a name with special meaning in your family? Like your grandmothers name? There should be a lot of other names to choose I'm sorry for...

outofasituation − NTA. To people saying "you don't own the name", if you're above 15, get over yourselves. Way for your sister to poison you and your wife's relationship with...

It's not so much about the name itself, but creating a living reminder of what you went through that will be in your face, so to speak, at random times....

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Moose-Live − NTA. You're not trying to "book" a name for a hypothetical child, this is the name of your actual child. Your sister is being hugely insensitive about this....

Jollycondane − NTA. Yes, fine…. Technically nobody owns a name and yes, technically you can’t ban her from using it but there is nuance in the world ffs. Your sister...

dazedkatwoman − NTA and I question the integrity of anyone who votes any other way. This isn't about owning a name or banning a name because it was the name...

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There are thousands upon thousands of names. This is OP'S *dead* child's name. Sis is willing to cause her sibling pain and grief for a lifetime because the name is...

What kind of person is willing to cause ongoing emotional pain to a loved one for life because they can't be bothered to pick one of thousands of pretty names...

A few voices try to see both perspectives, recognizing the emotional weight while noting that names aren’t legally owned.

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ShowUsYaNungas − NTA. As your sister, she should know - or at least contemplate - how this might make you feel.

Absolute best case scenario would be if she asked in the hope of bringing commemoration to your angel by naming her daughter the same.

Such a thing might require quite a special relationship with your sister. But, I feel you have the right to say she shouldn't use the same name if it doesn't...

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ssddalways − NTA this baby may have been yours and your family might not have grieved the same or had the same connection but they should have love and understanding...

As a sister myself I would never do this to my brother, regardless of how I felt it was an honour or whatever other bs people will say to you....

I'm sorry for your lose and the grief you still feel, you should not be expected to put it aside and if your sister goes ahead with this name then...

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Anyone here not understanding your view needs to give their heads a wobble, I've seen comments saying it was her neice but sorry being the aunt in this situation does...

[Reddit User] − NTA? i get it, no one owns names. but having given the info you provided it comes off as inconsiderate and insensitive imo.

no i don’t think it’s fair to try and tell someone what name they can/can’t use but i don’t agree with her wanting to use that name knowing it upsets...

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it might not have the same significance to her as it does to you but there are legitimately millions of other names.

to me it’s basic respect and she is overstepping. i would never do that to anyone close to me and i feel like that should be common sense?

of course unless discussed and encouraged by you. but at the end of the day you can’t tell someone what to do. i’m sorry for your loss and i’m sorry...

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A couple of comments bring a touch of realism and gentle humor to cut through the tension.

stopandstare17 − NAH but slightly leaning towards your sister possibly being one. . I know it’s sensitive but a 16 week fetus may not hold the same weight for everyone...

Yes, she was very much your daughter and child but.. unfortunately that doesnt mean her name which you had decided to give to her at birth is off limits to...

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your sister isnt wrong to like it still and wish it for her child and you arent wrong in your EMOTIONAL aspect but logically, your sister isnt wrong either. That...

[Reddit User] − NTA — however there’s not much you can do if she does use that name. Instead of trying to control your sister perhaps you should tell her...

This story reveals how deeply personal grief can collide with individual freedom within the same family. While no one can legally control a name choice, the emotional consequences of ignoring a sibling’s pain are very real and long-lasting.

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What do you think—should family members always avoid names tied to deceased loved ones out of respect, or does personal preference take priority when the name isn’t a direct family heirloom? Have you ever faced a similar naming conflict in your own family? Share your thoughts below.

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