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I had so many of you ask me how we decided on baby names after I revealed our sweet boys name and Gender on InstaGram. The truth is, the husband and I have had this little guys’ name picked out since his brother was born. We’ve always had two boy names and one girl name picked out (a sign, maybe?), so when I found out I was pregnant, the name picking headache was the furthest thing from our mind.
We initially had another name picked out for Noah (another post for another day) and changed our minds last minute. I’m certain that that won’t happen this time. This little boy already fits his name and I am already certain that he is a Jonah.
We picked Joshua Noah for our oldest for two different reasons. “Joshua” is the husband’s name and we loved the idea of naming our first born after his daddy. But, just as important as his namesake was the meaning behind the name Joshua (God is Salvation–source). We wanted to give our son a strong foundation and felt that his name was the place to start. We knew we didn’t want to call him Josh, since that’s what his daddy’s name is. After a series of coincidental events, we chose the name Noah for his middle name. Noah meaning peaceful combined with the name Joshua made for a good, strong biblical name that had some family attachment.
With Jonah, we went back and forth between his name and the name Jacob. The husband liked the name Jacob as much, but in my mind, the only thing I could think of was Twilight. If the series hadn’t been so popular right now, we might have considered it a bit more, but I didn’t want our son born in a Vampire Infatuated era and grow up thinking that he was named after a teenage werwolf.
I loved the idea of both boys names ending in “-ah” and thought it was fun and unique. Jonah also has a strong biblical correlation and meaning. Everyone knows the story of Jonah and the whale and the incredible faith he had during his time inside the belly of the whale. The name Michael was another family name. My daddy has always wanted a namesake and we were excited to give him that if our second baby was discovered to have been a boy. Again, Michael is a biblical name (the name of God’s archangel), and we wanted to ensure that both of our children grew up with a strong faith and a strong spiritual base.
We’ve only ever had one little girl name in mind. The middle name was decided before I ever got married…Elizabeth. My grandmother’s middle name was Elizabeth as is mine. It’s been a family name for years and years and years. But, the first name gave us a tiny bit of trouble. We talked about a handful of different names, but nothing seemed to suit our family. Finally, not too long after Noah was born, we settled on the name Rebekah (not Rebecca). We liked that it had the same “-ah” ending as the name Noah (and now Jonah) and we loved that again it was scriptural.
I’m not sure what we’ll do if we ever decide to have baby number three and it turns out to be a boy. We don’t have any other boy names picked out, so we’d actually have to sit down and discuss that this time. Somewhere in my heart I wonder if there’s a reason that we have these three names chosen and only these three names. I guess only time will tell.
For now, we’ll just keep preparing and planning to welcome Jonah into our family. I know he’s going to fit right in…
hubby’s name is also joshua and baby’s name is also noah. 🙂
I love hearing about how other people name their children. We had it fairly easy the first time around…my husband and I sat with the name book for several evenings, and after alot of names, the only one we could agree on was Noah…I love that name, and he is definitly a Noah! The second pregnancy (which we were soo fortunate to have, due to fertility problems) turned out to be twins…what a blessing! I was lucky enough to have a textbook pregnancy…the toughest part of the entire pregnancy was choosing names for the babies! We found out we were having boy/girl twins, so that made it even harder…I wanted names that sounded nice together, but also sounded nice with Noah’s name. We had decided on names, but then I changed my mind…story for another day…maybe it was pregnancy hormones…who knows! Anyway, had to go back to the drawing board. The only names that we could agree on were Jonah and Lilah. We were going to spell her name Lila, but I thought it would be neat if they all ended in -ah. I was really hoping for a biblical name for her, but the only one that I really liked was Hannah, and that is the name of my hubby’s ex. Needless to say, that was crossed off the list. So, at the end of the day, we have Noah, Lilah and Jonah. For middle names, we used family names – Charles (hubby’s grandfather’s name), Rose (my great aunt’s name), and Carter (family name) respectively. I am happy with the names, and the older (the babies) get, the more they seem like their names. 🙂
All beautiful names, Courtney. Also love that they’re so meaningful.
We chose our firstborn son’s name from a baby book. I was about 8 or 9 weeks pregnant, had no idea if we were having a boy or girl, but I knew, deep in my heart that it was a boy. We were in a bookstore and just for kicks, picked up a random baby book name, flipped it open and landed in the Z section. And saw the name and said, that one. We’re going with that one, and it was perfect.
Before I was pregnant with #2, we were watching a video my mother-in-law filmed of our son at an indoor gym, and in the background, heard a lady call out a name (she was calling her son I think), and my husband and I both thought, that’s a nice name and filed it away. When we found out we were having a boy, we decided to go with that.
All perfectly random, but perfect. 🙂
I think those little stories are great! That’s how we came to use Noah. We saw a lady in the mall (when we were originally planning to name him Sawyer) and she was talking to her little boy. His name was Noah. Josh and I looked at each other then and knew that Sawyer wasn’t our sons name…Noah was.