I'll go first:
So I originally was going to go with Sara. I've always vibed with the name, I used it in video games for my characters constantly, and it just felt right. Also for Sara Kerrigan who's "I'm queen bitch of the universe" line was probably my first experience of gender envy. The problem is at this point Sara had become a character in what was my most popular series at the time so it felt weird naming myself after a character I only retroactively realized was a self-insert of my gender needs.
I next was going to go with Jessica, for Jessica Drew from Marvel - specifically the Ultimate version of the comics. While the Ultimate comic line is largely remembered for being mostly bad and had the one redeeming quality of introducing us to Miles Morales (which 100% is the best thing to come from the Ultimate universe), it also gave us Jessica Drew of Earth 1620 - a clone of Peter Parker who just had the Y chromosome replaced with an X, and also had all of Peter's memories. The character was incredibly trans coded and fascinated me long before I figured out I was trans...but one of my closest friends is Jessica and so it felt weird.
So then I was going to with Rachel for Rachel Summers from the X-Men as well as to give myself a name that tied me to my Jewish origins but then someone asked "Can I call your Rach?" and the sound of that shortening was so very much not a vibe that I dropped the name entirely.
Then I remembered Sylvia. Sylvia Dawngard was a character of mine in a long running FATE game I was playing with friends at the time. While not my first TTRPG character to be a woman - that was a Sara - Sylvia was the one that gave me gender euphoria. A changeling in a world were that meant "Human who got abducted by fae and was raised by them," Sylvia was the champion of the long forgotten Autumn Court of fae and over the course of the game came to weild the Eclipse Hammer (which I now have tattooed on my arm) and just was one of my favorite characters I've ever played. She also was constantly torn between her fae upbringing and human nature, not feeling like she fully belonged in either world, which only changed when she met her Nephilim girlfriend Kohabiel and together they formed a new home and... yeah, I loved that character.
Equally importantly there's no shortening of that name I dislike. Syl, Sylvie, Vee, Via, Lyv, Sylv, basically any version of the name worked perfectly for me.
So yeah, that's my story. What's yours?
This'll be a long post 'cause plurality.
First up Leolin was our chosen name before realising plurality. It's an anglicisation of Llewelyn, drawing from the two flase beliefs that the Llew in Llewlyn is llew as in lion, and that the Leo in Leopold is leo as in lion to morph the Llew into Leo. It ends up as a distincly Wenglish (Welsh-English) name, and also relating to cats like our legal name is, and pronounceable by non Welsh speakers as long as they don't overthink it. We had actually been using Leo as a fursona name, and also our Animal Crossing name, but it wasn't intended to become our primary name at first.
Individual headmates under the cut.
I looked through the website that I use to find character names (behindthename.com) to try and find something I really liked the sound of. I made a list of possibilities and tried to narrow it down, but once I saw Hannah in the list I was pretty sure that was gonna be it. It fits me very well, I think. But I was sad to leave some of those other names behind. Eventually other people reminded me that I could totally have more than one, and encouraged me to use whichever mix I liked. Thanks plural folks!
So that's how I ended up Hannah/Lydia/Ada. I just really like how they sound. And I like that different people in my life use different names for me.
Sometimes I do feel slightly... boring? Like, so many trans folks have this deep, special connection to their name, from way before they knew. And I had to look through a list. But fuckin'... whatever, they're my names and they resonate with me.
I heard a name being shortened on a show (Hellsing I think?) Scar, shortened from Scarlett and fell in love with it, and then started looking at names on a name website and then came across 'Morrigan' and then looked up the history and meaning of the name (Celtic myth, The Morrigan! Bonus points for also being associated with Morrigan Aensland) and fell in love with the story and symbology and then, well, im now a Morrigan
So I was almost a Scarlett but then I saw Morrigan and was like, no yeah thats me, I am a Morrigan
when i was 15 my dad made me go to some weird conservative christian debate camp for homeschoolers and there were 4 siblings there, 3 girls and one boy. the three girls were named hope, grace, and joy. their brother was named chastity. i thought this was so funny that over a decade later i decided to steal the name. i'm named after a boy.
i think Princess Daisy is neat
before I was Daisy, I was using Kiwi which was a nickname I'd picked up in like... 5th grade, and continued to carry with me between schools for reasons. like - I had a friend from that class who came with me to middle school and kept using it, and then someone else had my deadname when I got there so it became an easy way to separately identify us. when I got to college, "Kiwi" was short enough to fit on the arcade cabinets so I just kept using it, and then it was my gaming tag from there because people were calling me Kiwi and stuff.
the thing is tho, I knew for a while that I didn't want Kiwi as a permanent name, but I was completely stumped for a new one despite being knee-deep in a Daisy fixation for many years of my adult life. like, Daisy is my go-to in Mario Kart and Mario Party, I bought a Daisy pin at an Evo in like 2017 or 2018 and immediately put it on my work lanyard (still there!), I own two Daisy amiibos (one purchased by me, one as a Christmas gift from my roommates who didn't know I had one)... I didn't really think about it as a name for myself until end of 2019 and it felt so obvious in retrospect.
it also makes greetings way easier because either people recognize "hi, I'm daisy" and it's funny or they don't and it's mine
Have you ever played a video game on the Commodore Amiga line of 16 bit microcomputers from the 1980's? More often than not, they will be barely functional, break down frequently, move sluggishly, and just not be very fun to be around. They will sometimes look good, but not in the way games do on more popular systems; impressive tech but bad art design. But every once in a while, you'll find something truly special, that you end up loving not in spite of its problems, but because of them.
My name is Ammie, and my surname starts with Ga. The above paragraph is a very clever analogy.
Also, even the worst Amiga games had incredible music, and I'm an aspiring composer, so this name gives me power, maybe.