For years, Marrissa’s name has been a constant source of frustration, mispronounced even by those closest to her. At a family Thanksgiving, when her Uncle Gary repeatedly butchered her name and dismissed her corrections, something inside her snapped—an aching reminder of feeling unseen and unheard in her own family.
In a quiet act of defiance and self-respect, Marrissa renamed him “Gerd,” turning the tables and making him feel the sting of being overlooked. What began as a playful jab soon became a powerful symbol of her demand for recognition, forcing a long-overdue promise to honor her identity and her name.

Won’t call me by my name? You get a new one!





As author and communication expert Dale Carnegie famously wrote, “A person’s name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.” In this situation, the uncle’s refusal to use the correct name functions as a form of identity erasure, where he prioritizes his own convenience over the narrator’s personhood and dignity.
The narrator’s decision to call him “Gerd” is an example of social mirroring, which is often used to highlight the absurdity of another person’s behavior by reflecting it back at them. This tactic was effective because it forced the uncle to experience the same lack of respect he was projecting, effectively breaking through his apathy toward the narrator’s repeated corrections.
The narrator’s actions were appropriate as a way to establish an immediate consequence for a boundary violation, though it is a confrontational approach. For future interactions, a professional recommendation is to use the “broken record” technique: calmly repeating the correct name and refusing to engage in any further conversation until it is used, which maintains high-road maturity while still enforcing the boundary.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.






I had a (now) friend named Noah who mispronounced it, and when I corrected him, he was like “it doesn’t matter”.

Well, from then until he gave in and apologized, he was Niall, he was Neal, he was Nathan, he was Nicholas, he was any N name I could think of till he realized what I was doing and started pronouncing my name properly.











The narrator is emotionally exhausted after years of being ignored and chose to use a humorous yet biting form of retaliation to gain basic respect. This creates a conflict between their need for self-validation and the traditional family expectation to tolerate dismissive behavior from elders for the sake of holiday peace.
Was the narrator’s decision to use a mocking nickname a justified way to establish a personal boundary, or was it an immature response that only served to create unnecessary tension?







