It’s not a childhood trauma thing. I had a decent upbringing. I’ve been like this all my life. I’ll talk about people using their name to others when the named person isn’t around, but I avoid using their name as a vocative to their face.

Same thing with people using my name. I don’t mind people summoning me by calling my name, but I cringe when people use my name as a vocative in front of me. I also get irritated when people I don’t know and have no intention of establishing a relationship with use my name.

I worked in a call center and we had the usual opening “thank you for calling _____ my name is early_riser, how can I help you?” I assumed the unspoken rule was that I’m giving my name so the client can later refer to me in complaints or commendations, not because I want to establish anything more than a client-employee relationship. Also, I always use “sir” or “ma’am” when addressing clients, and hope they reciprocate that respect.

Edit:

Yes I know what names are for. Also “angry” was too strong a word. I don’t lash out at people when they do this. I understand that people are trying to be friendly when they use my name and that the irritation is unwarranted, but it’s there and I want to know why.

  • mosspiglet@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    What bothers me is people who use your name constantly in conversation. “Mosspiglet, I saw this movie last night. Yeah, Mosspiglet, it was really good.”

  • CultLeader4Hire@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I also am like this but it’s partially trauma. The general agreed upon “advice” is that if this isn’t related to trauma it’s because of neurodivergence, at least that’s what professionals have told me. My issue is from both.

  • blockheadjt@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    I use names when specificity is needed. E.g., if I’m in a room with two other people, and I want to address only one of them, I’ll use a name (or nickname if there is one) to clarify who I am addressing.

    If I’m in a room with only one other person, then using a name to address them would be redundant, unless I am not getting their attention otherwise (e.g., they’re engrossed in a book).

  • Bo7a@piefed.ca
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    1 day ago

    I despise hearing/reading my name. So much so that when I found a book series I loved, but the MC shared my name I actually put down the paper version, grabbed the e-book, and did a global find/replace on all 12 books to remove my name.

  • gilokee@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    yes, it makes me really uncomfortable! I had a friend who would always say my name while talking to me, and it felt somehow… diminutive? Like she was trying to be motherly? I don’t know.

    • mosspiglet@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I had a friend in school who did this. Really nice guy, but he would constantly say your name while having a regular conversation. It was always unnerving and distracting.

      • YawningNostalgia@thelemmy.club
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        22 hours ago

        I had multiple classmates do this too and they were genuinely wonderful people. I think they heard it once as a tactic and decided to keep using it. Nothing against them but it’s terrible advice What if it was a psyop to make life more difficult for autistic people lol

  • DamienGramatacus@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Some people do this to convey that they are listening and paying attention. However, when overused, (like saying sometimes name 5 times in a sentence in a one to one conversation) I have always found it disingenuous and try to avoid doing it myself.

  • nullptr@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I dont hate it, but it’s wierd enough to me; so that i only ever do this to other when i am angry, with elevated voice

  • Strider@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Chiming in with the ‘you might be neurodivergent’ crowd.

    Absolutely typical.

    Welcome and feel free to ping if you want to know stuff.

  • supernight52@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I think you’re just autistic, buddy. This is not typical behavior for people that are not neurodivergent. The tell is that you get “oddly angry” when someone uses your name when they’re strangers. Good luck navigating life with this one.

    • rowinxavier@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      As an autistic person with ADHD too I was going to say this. I hate my name being used, I strongly prefer dude or mate, I’ll even take “hey you”, but using my name is very similar to extreme eye contact or touching my hands. No, no thank you, I would prefer not to.

    • YawningNostalgia@thelemmy.club
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      1 day ago

      It’s not an unreasonable gripe and autism isn’t an insult.
      Some people use your name too much and it does feel weird, like they’re trying to use their self-help book advice on you. “Good luck navigating life” is a nasty thing to say. Don’t be a dick

      • supernight52@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I’m not insulting or being a dick. You just are tone policing text, which is wild. I am autistic too. My “good luck” was sincere. Fuck yourself, you holier-than-thou loser.

        • YawningNostalgia@thelemmy.club
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          23 hours ago

          Tone matters and it didn’t sound sincere, it sounded like you were putting someone down. Immediately resorting to calling me a loser and telling me to fuck myself is telling on yourself. OP was talking about something a lot of people can relate to and you came off mean and condescending. They’re just trying to have a conversation. Sorry you react so poorly to differing opinions, you’ll have a hard and lonely life.

          Anyway, not talking to you anymore, there are a lot of people who read some book like how to win friends and influence people and use that advice in a way that you can pick up on. If you feel something is sleazy and off you should trust that gut feeling.

          • supernight52@lemmy.world
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            23 hours ago

            I told you to fuck yourself, because you were attributing something to me that was not said or implied. Fuck yourself again :)

            • YawningNostalgia@thelemmy.club
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              23 hours ago

              Your response to OP was unkind and your behavior after was egregious. Think about your wording next time. You don’t know what others are going through and your desire to get the last word in could harm a stranger for no reason.

              • supernight52@lemmy.world
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                23 hours ago

                You’re the one that was attributing malice and rudeness where none was implied or stated. I was not being rude to OP, you simply interpret it that way. You’re wrong, and fuck you again :)

    • GreyEyedGhost@piefed.ca
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      2 days ago

      Feeling this. My preferred method to acknowledge people when talking is to look at them. Bad enough, in my opinion. About the only time I use a person’s name is in a greeting or, more often, to get their attention.

  • MnemonicBump@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    Names exist specifically so other people have something to call you. There is no point in having a name if it isn’t explicitly for the purpose of being used by other people.

    • thericofactor@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Hah, for me exactly the opposite: I repeat peoples’ names when I talk to them so I remember them. At first it felt awkward, like OP described, but now I do it naturally without thinking.

      • [deleted]@piefed.world
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        2 days ago

        I tried that and it didn’t work, just like all the other memory tricks. Hell, I talk to four friends online almost every single day for over a decade and occasionally one of their names slips my mind.

        ADHD sure makes social interactions fun!

        • Aniki@feddit.org
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          2 days ago

          i write down people’s names when i first meet them on a notebook in my phone. it works!

          i.e.: 2026-05-12, university, department of chemistry, charlie (in the context of a new research group i encountered)

          note that the example is made up. nobody’s called charlie.

          • [deleted]@piefed.world
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            2 days ago

            Cool, cool. While doing multiple things can slightly improve the chances of me remembering someone’s name until the next time I sleep when my brain flushes anything it doesn’t consider important that it didn’t drop already. Writing names down does not work for me as a long term solution, but it can be helpful in a short window.

            I tried literally every possible approach over decades and nothing sticks for names of people I don’t interact with often. Sometimes my brain does remember a few people’s names, but I have no control over when it works and when it doesn’t.

            My favorite thing at work is our photo directory! It lets me see the person to connect my memories to their name in an email or meeting roster because I remember literally everything else about a person except their name when it is relevant. My brain just doesn’t consider names to be important I guess.

            • Aniki@feddit.org
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              2 days ago

              My brain just doesn’t consider names to be important I guess.

              in the modern world, they are most often not. in some spiritual traditions, names actually mean something. each name has a unique meaning attached to it, that describes the person or some aspect of their character.

              There’s the kiki/boba effect for it.

          • blarghly@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I do something similar! Though my notes are usually more like

            Charli - girl w nice ass in yellow pants
            Tommy - her bf :(

  • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Yes it is weird. It is your name, what else should they call you? “Cat with the fluffy eyebrows”?

    I assumed the unspoken rule is rule is that the client can give my name so the client can later refer to me in complaints.

    The call center would certainly now you took the call without needing your name, but you are partially correct. You giving your name humanizes your interaction with the client so the client is less inclined to submit a complaint. Also so much of customer satisfaction with outages and issues is achieved just by having someone address the issue.

  • FosterMolasses@leminal.space
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    1 day ago

    Oh my gosh, I genuinely thought I was the only one who felt this way.

    I’ve even seen people online in smaller communities referring to each other by their first names instead of their user handles and it always made me cringe a little for some reason haha

    The bright side being that I’m completely immune to “neurolinguistic programming” or whatever weird shit manipulators are taught to use. Every single time I hear my name emphasized or repeated, it’s like I can hear the slash 8-bit sfx and my HP going down.

    Do this enough times and I will begin to avoid you like an actual viral contagion, bwahaha