After my son was born, I told my parents I’d chosen the name Chris. My dad’s face went pale, and my mom’s forced smile didn’t hide her discomfort. Moments later, my dad excused himself, saying he felt unwell. When we were alone, my mom anxiously urged me to choose another name, insisting there was a reason Chris wasn’t an option. Almost twenty years ago, she explained, someone close to our family—also named Chris—had been part of a painful chapter in their lives. They never spoke of it again, and the name carried memories they had tried to leave behind.
At first, I felt defensive. Naming my son had been an emotional, joyful choice. I had imagined the name, pictured him growing up with it, and said it out loud a thousand times. But as I listened, I saw something I hadn’t expected in my mother’s eyes: not control, but genuine fear of reopening old wounds. She wasn’t trying to take anything away from me—she was trying to protect a peace she and my father had earned after years of healing.
That night, I held my son close and whispered the name Chris softly, testing how it felt with this new knowledge. It was still beautiful—but suddenly heavier. I thought about how names carry stories, and how family history, even the parts we don’t know, travels quietly through time. Some chapters are meant to guide us, others to remain closed. And sometimes, honoring family means recognizing the battles we never saw.
The next morning, I told my parents we had chosen a new name. My mom cried—not from relief alone, but from gratitude. My dad hugged me a little longer than usual, as if saying thank you without speaking. As I looked at my son, now sleeping peacefully with his new name fitting him like a gentle promise, I realized something: names shape beginnings, but love shapes everything after. This name would carry not just our hope for him, but the compassion that helped choose it.